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A03285 Summary:

BILL NOA03285
 
SAME ASNo Same As
 
SPONSORRosenthal L
 
COSPNSRGallagher, Kelles, Simon, Otis
 
MLTSPNSR
 
Add Art 42 §§1100 - 1103, Gen Bus L
 
Creates privacy standards for electronic health products and services; requires consent to be given for the collection and/or sharing of personal health information or other personal data.
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A03285 Text:



 
                STATE OF NEW YORK
        ________________________________________________________________________
 
                                          3285
 
                               2023-2024 Regular Sessions
 
                   IN ASSEMBLY
 
                                    February 2, 2023
                                       ___________
 
        Introduced  by  M. of A. L. ROSENTHAL, GALLAGHER, KELLES, SIMON, OTIS --
          read once and referred  to  the  Committee  on  Consumer  Affairs  and
          Protection
 
        AN  ACT  to  amend  the  general business law, in relation to electronic
          health products and services
 
          The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and  Assem-
        bly, do enact as follows:
 
     1    Section 1. The general business law is amended by adding a new article
     2  42 to read as follows:
     3                                 ARTICLE 42
     4                   ELECTRONIC HEALTH PRODUCTS AND SERVICES
 
     5  Section 1100. Definitions.
     6          1101. Electronic health products and services; privacy.
     7          1102. Private right of action.
     8          1103. Actions that are HIPAA compliant.
     9    §  1100.  Definitions. For the purposes of this article, the following
    10  terms shall have the following meanings:
    11    1. "Consent" means an  action  which  (a)  clearly  and  conspicuously
    12  communicates  the  individual's authorization of an act or practice; (b)
    13  is made in the absence of any mechanism in the user interface  that  has
    14  the purpose or substantial effect of obscuring, subverting, or impairing
    15  decision  making or choice to obtain consent; and (c) cannot be inferred
    16  from inaction.
    17    2. "Deactivation" means a user's deletion, removal,  or  other  action
    18  made to terminate their use of an electronic health product or service.
    19    3.  "Electronic health product or service" means any software or hard-
    20  ware, including a mobile application, website, or other related  product
    21  or service, that is designed to maintain personal health information, in
    22  order to make such personal health information available to a user or to
    23  a  health  care  provider  at  the  request  of such user or health care

         EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                              [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                   LBD01394-02-3

        A. 3285                             2
 
     1  provider, for the purposes of allowing such user to manage their  infor-
     2  mation,  or  for  the  diagnosis,  treatment, or management of a medical
     3  condition.
     4    4. "Health care provider" means:
     5    (a) a hospital as defined in article twenty-eight of the public health
     6  law, a home care services agency as defined in article thirty-six of the
     7  public  health  law, a hospice as defined in article forty of the public
     8  health law, a health maintenance  organization  as  defined  in  article
     9  forty-four  of  the  public  health  law, or a shared health facility as
    10  defined in article forty-seven of the public health law; or
    11    (b) a person  licensed  under  article  one  hundred  thirty-one,  one
    12  hundred  thirty-one-B, one hundred thirty-two, one hundred thirty-three,
    13  one hundred thirty-six, one hundred thirty-nine, one hundred  forty-one,
    14  one  hundred  forty-three,  one  hundred  forty-four, one hundred fifty-
    15  three, one hundred fifty-four, one  hundred  fifty-six  or  one  hundred
    16  fifty-nine of the education law.
    17    5.  "Individually identifiable information" means any information that
    18  identifies or could reasonably be linked, directly or indirectly,  to  a
    19  particular consumer, household, or consumer device.
    20    6.  "Personal  health information" means any individually identifiable
    21  information about an individual's mental or physical condition  provided
    22  by such individual, or otherwise gained or inferred from monitoring such
    23  individual's mental or physical condition.
    24    7.  "Other personal data" means any individually identifiable informa-
    25  tion about an individual  provided  by  such  individual,  or  otherwise
    26  gained  or inferred from monitoring such individual, other than personal
    27  health information.
    28    8. "User" means an individual who has downloaded or uses an electronic
    29  health product or service.
    30    9. "Data processing" means any action or set of actions  performed  on
    31  or  with  personal information, including but not limited to collection,
    32  access, use, retention, sharing, monetizing, analysis, creation,  gener-
    33  ation,  derivation,  decision-making,  recording, alternation, organiza-
    34  tion, structuring, storage, disclosure, transmission,  sale,  licensing,
    35  disposal,  destruction,  de-identifying,  or  other handling of personal
    36  information.
    37    10. "Covered organization" means an entity that offers  an  electronic
    38  health  product  or  service  that  is subject to the provisions of this
    39  article.
    40    § 1101. Electronic health products and services; privacy. 1.   (a)  It
    41  shall  be unlawful for a covered organization to engage in data process-
    42  ing unless:
    43    (i) the user to whom the information or data pertains has given affir-
    44  mative express consent to such data processing; or
    45    (ii) such data processing is strictly necessary and proportionate  for
    46  the purpose of:
    47    (A) protecting against malicious, fraudulent, or illegal activity;
    48    (B)  detecting,  responding  to,  or  preventing security incidents or
    49  threats; or
    50    (C) the covered organization is compelled to do so  by  a  warrant  or
    51  court order.
    52    (b) The general nature of any data processing shall be conveyed by the
    53  covered  organization in a standalone document such as a data processing
    54  addendum, and in clear and prominent terms in such a way that  an  ordi-
    55  nary consumer would notice and understand such terms.

        A. 3285                             3
 
     1    (c) A user may consent to data processing on behalf of their dependent
     2  minors.
     3    (d)  A covered organization shall provide an effective mechanism for a
     4  user to revoke their consent after it is given.  After  a  user  revokes
     5  their  consent, the covered organization shall cease all data processing
     6  of such user's personal health information or  other  personal  data  as
     7  soon  as  practicable,  but  not later than fifteen days after such user
     8  revokes such consent.   The covered organization shall  also  delete  or
     9  otherwise  destroy  any such user's personal health information or other
    10  personal data per the terms of paragraph (a) of subdivision four of this
    11  section.
    12    2. In order to obtain consent in compliance with  subdivision  one  of
    13  this section, an entity offering an electronic health product or service
    14  shall:
    15    (a)  disclose  to  the  user  all personal health information or other
    16  personal data such electronic health product  or  service  will  collect
    17  from the user upon obtaining consent;
    18    (b)  disclose  to  the  user  any  third  party  with whom such user's
    19  personal health information or other personal data may be shared by  the
    20  electronic health product or service upon obtaining consent;
    21    (c)  disclose  to  the  user  the  purpose for collecting any personal
    22  health information or other personal data; and
    23    (d) allow the user to withdraw consent at any time.
    24    3. No electronic health product or service shall collect any  personal
    25  health  information  or  other  personal  data  beyond  which a user has
    26  specifically consented to share with such electronic health  product  or
    27  service under subdivision one of this section.
    28    4.  (a) An electronic health product or service shall delete or other-
    29  wise destroy any personal health  information  or  other  personal  data
    30  collected  from  a user immediately upon such user's request, withdrawal
    31  of consent; or upon such user's deactivation of their account.
    32    (b) An entity that collects a user's personal  health  information  or
    33  other  personal  data  shall  limit  its  collection and sharing of that
    34  information with third  parties  to  what  is  reasonably  necessary  to
    35  provide a service or conduct an activity that a user has requested or is
    36  reasonably necessary for security or fraud prevention.
    37    (c)  An  entity  that collects a user's personal health information or
    38  other personal data shall limit its use and retention of  such  informa-
    39  tion  to  what  is strictly necessary to provide a service or conduct an
    40  activity that a user has requested or  a  related  operational  purpose,
    41  provided  that  information collected or retained solely for security or
    42  fraud prevention may not be used for operational purposes.  Monetization
    43  of personal health information or other personal data, including but not
    44  limited  to  the  use  of targeted advertising, cross-context behavioral
    45  advertising or marketing services, or the use of personal health  infor-
    46  mation for training or inclusion in machine learning models, beyond that
    47  which a user has explicitly consented to shall not be considered strict-
    48  ly  necessary  to  provide a service or conduct an activity or a related
    49  operational purpose.
    50    (d) If a user deletes  their  personal  health  information  or  other
    51  personal  data  collected  by  an  entity, or requests the entity delete
    52  their personal health information or other personal  data,  such  entity
    53  shall  retain  such user's personal health information or other personal
    54  data on any server or data management system no longer than thirty  days
    55  after  such deletion or request. The entity must give the user an oppor-

        A. 3285                             4
 
     1  tunity to download  a  copy  of  such  personal  health  information  or
     2  personal data prior to permanent deletion.
     3    5.  A  covered  organization  shall  not  discriminate  against a user
     4  because the user exercised any of the user's rights under this  article,
     5  or  did  not  agree  to information processing for a separate product or
     6  service, including, but not limited to, by:
     7    (a) Denying goods or services to the user.
     8    (b) Charging different prices or rates for goods or services,  includ-
     9  ing  through  the  use of discounts or other benefits or imposing penal-
    10  ties.
    11    (c) Providing a different level or quality of goods or services to the
    12  user.
    13    (d) Suggesting that the consumer will receive  a  different  price  or
    14  rate  for  goods or services or a different level or quality of goods or
    15  services.
    16    6. A covered organization  shall  implement  and  maintain  reasonable
    17  security  procedures  and practices, including administrative, physical,
    18  and technical safeguards, appropriate to the nature of  the  information
    19  and  the  purposes  for  which  the personal health information or other
    20  personal data will be used, to protect consumers' personal health infor-
    21  mation or other personal data from unauthorized use, disclosure, access,
    22  destruction, or modification.
    23    § 1102. Private right of action. 1. Any person who has been injured by
    24  reason of a violation of this article may bring an action in  their  own
    25  name,  or in the name of their minor child, to enjoin such unlawful act,
    26  or to recover the greater  of  their  actual  damages  or  one  thousand
    27  dollars,  or  both such actions. The court shall award reasonable attor-
    28  ney's fees to a prevailing plaintiff. Actions pursuant to  this  section
    29  may be brought on a class-wide basis.
    30    2.  Any  entity  who violates this article is subject to an injunction
    31  and liable for damages and a civil penalty. When calculating damages and
    32  civil penalties, the court shall consider the number of  affected  indi-
    33  viduals, the severity of the violation, and the size and revenues of the
    34  covered  entity.  Each  individual  whose  data was unlawfully processed
    35  counts as a separate violation. Each provision of this article that  was
    36  violated counts as a separate violation.
    37    §  1103.  Actions  that are HIPAA compliant.   Nothing in this article
    38  shall prohibit any action taken with respect to the  health  information
    39  of an individual by a business associate or covered organization that is
    40  permissible  under  the  federal  regulations  concerning  standards for
    41  privacy of  individually  identifiable  health  information  promulgated
    42  under  section  264(c)  of the Health Insurance Portability and Account-
    43  ability Act of 1996.
    44    § 2. This act shall take effect on the sixtieth  day  after  it  shall
    45  have become a law.
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