FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact:
• Ronda B. Goldfein, Esq., AIDS Law Project of Pennsylvania, 215-587-9377 goldfein@aidslawpa.org
• Sally Friedman, Esq., Legal Action Center, 212-243-1313 Ext. 130 sfriedman@lac.org
• Shanon J. Carson, Esq., Berger & Montague, P.C., 215-875-4656 scarson@bm.net
• Torin A. Dorros, Esq., Dorros Law, 310-997-2050 tdorros@dorroslaw.com
PHILADELPHIA (Jan. 17, 2018) -- A $17 million settlement was announced today in a federal class action lawsuit against Aetna, Inc., the third largest health insurance company in the United States, after a faulty mailing breached the HIV privacy of thousands of Aetna’s customers.
The announcement by plaintiffs’ attorneys comes six months after Aetna, as part of a settlement of an earlier set of lawsuits, mailed a notice in July 2017 in envelopes with large transparent windows that accidentally revealed that the recipients were prescribed HIV medications. It is believed to be the world’s largest data breach involving HIV privacy, and many recipients have reported suffering significant harm as a result of the mailing.
The papers filed in support of the settlement allege that Aetna improperly transmitted to its legal counsel and a mail vendor the names 13,487 customers who had been prescribed HIV medications and that large transparent window envelopes revealing confidential HV-related information sent to 11,875 of them.
Among those who received the mailing were “Andrew Beckett,” a Bucks County, Pa., man who was the lead plaintiff in the nationwide class action lawsuit filed in August 2017 in U.S. District Court in Philadelphia by the AIDS Law Project of Pennsylvania, the Legal Action Center, and Berger & Montague, P.C., and “S.A.”, a Los Angeles County, Ca. man who was the lead plaintiff in the class action lawsuit filed in California by Dorros Law the same day as the Beckett case and which was subsequently consolidated with the Beckett case. The plaintiffs include people taking medication to treat HIV as well as those who, like Beckett, take PrEP, a pre-exposure prophylactic that prevents HIV.
The case arose in response to calls of alarm from people throughout the country who received the mailing or had heard about it. The lead plaintiff’s pseudonym is that of the fictional lawyer with HIV portrayed by Tom Hanks in his Academy Award-winning role in the 1993 movie Philadelphia.
Under the terms of the proposed settlement, which is now subject to the Court’s approval, Aetna has agreed to pay $17,161,200 to resolve the claims. All Settlement Class Members will automatically receive a Base Payment of either $75, to those whose protected health information was allegedly improperly disclosed by Aetna to its legal counsel and mail vendor, or the payment of at least $500 (inclusive of the $75 payment above), to those whose privacy was breached by the large-windowed envelope, whichever is applicable.
In addition, Settlement Class Members whose privacy was breached by the large-windowed envelope have the opportunity to seek additional monetary relief through the filing of a claim form documenting financial or non-financial harm.
The settlement also includes the implementation by Aetna of a new “best practices” policy to prevent similar incidents from occurring in the future, and provides for attorneys’ fees and expenses.
The settlement agreement and motion for preliminary approval can be found here: http://www.aidslawpa.org/motion-for-preliminary-approval-and-settlement-agreement/
Beckett, the lead plaintiff, expressed satisfaction with the settlement. “HIV still has a negative stigma associated with it, and I am pleased that this encouraging agreement with Aetna shows that HIV-related information warrants special care,” he said.
Ronda B. Goldfein, executive director of the Philadelphia-based AIDS Law Project of Pennsylvania, said that because stigma associated with HIV is still pervasive, some people who received the mailing were forced from their homes or suffered irreparable damages to relationships with friends, relatives, and neighbors. “The fear of losing control of HIV-related information and the resulting risk of discrimination are barriers to health care,” Goldfein said. “This settlement reinforces the importance of keeping such information private, and we hope it reassures people living with HIV, or those on PrEP, that they do not have to choose between privacy and health care.”
Sally Friedman, legal director of the New York City-based Legal Action Center, said “the settlement provides a fair and just way to compensate class members for their harm while also requiring practice changes to prevent future breaches. The settlement’s magnitude will help restore the dignity and voice of those affected.”
Shanon J. Carson, a managing shareholder of Berger & Montague, P.C., added that “not a day has gone by that I and my colleagues have not paused to think about the individuals and their families who have been affected by this breach, and we are glad that this settlement will bring closure and a remedy to this situation.”
Torin A. Dorros, managing attorney of Dorros Law, which filed a subsequent lawsuit in California over the issue, which was later consolidated with Beckett’s lawsuit, called the outcome “a very significant resolution for all those affected and a landmark settlement in the area of protecting consumers’ health information and privacy.”
Founded in 1988, the AIDS Law Project of Pennsylvania (www.aidslawpa.org) is the nation’s only independent nonprofit, public-interest law firm providing free legal services exclusively to people living with HIV and AIDS.
The Legal Action Center (www.lac.org) is the nation’s only nonprofit law and policy organization whose sole mission is to fight discrimination against and protect the privacy rights of people with histories of addiction, HIV/AIDS, or criminal records, and to advocate for sound public policies.
Berger & Montague, P.C. (www.bergermontague.com) is a class action and complex civil litigation law firm based in Philadelphia and with offices in Minneapolis and Washington, D.C. The firm has played lead roles in major cases for over 48 years, achieving recoveries of more than $30 billion for its clients and the classes they have represented.
Dorros Law (www.dorroslaw.com) is a boutique litigation firm based in Beverly Hills, Calif., with a significant practice devoted to representing individuals in protected health information privacy violations.
Co-Lead Class Counsel in the case are: Ronda B. Goldfein, Yolanda French Lollis, and Adrian M. Lowe of the AIDS Law Project of Pennsylvania; Sally Friedman, Monica Welby, and Karla Lopez of the Legal Action Center; Shanon J. Carson, E. Michelle Drake, Sarah Schalman-Bergen, and John Albanese of Berger & Montague, P.C.; and Plaintiffs’ and Class Counsel includes Torin A. Dorros of Dorros Law.