Analysis of the Supreme Court's Decision Striking Down Vermont Pharmaceutical "Data Mining" Law

As promised in our earlier entry, here is our detailed discussion of  the Supreme Court's decision in Sorrell v IMS Health, Inc.,written by Colin J. Zick, Pat A. Cerundolo, Tad Heuer 

On Thursday, June 23, the United States Supreme Court voted 6-3 to strike down a Vermont statute that sought to impose significant restrictions on pharmaceutical detailing and “data mining” activities. Justice Kennedy’s opinion in the closely-watched case of Sorrell v. IMS Health Inc. held that the Vermont statute was an unconstitutional regulation of commercial speech. In so doing, the Court found that the sale, disclosure, and use of redacted pharmacy records containing physician prescribing information constituted “speech in aid of pharmaceutical marketing” and therefore enjoyed First Amendment protection. This case is an important victory for the pharmaceutical, medical device, biotechnology, and related sectors, The following summarizes this ruling and its potential consequences to those involved in these industries.

Background

The case concerned Vermont’s 2007 Act Relating to Increasing Transparency of Prescription Drug Pricing and Information. The Vermont law prohibited pharmacies and similar entities from selling information about physician prescription patterns (“prescriber-identifiable data”), and prohibited pharmaceutical manufacturers from using such data for marketing purposes without the express consent of prescribers. As a result, the law severely restricted the ability of pharmaceutical sales representatives to tailor their “detailing” presentations (the trade term used to describe routine pharmaceutical marketing presentations) to the needs of individual prescribers. The law did include an exception for the use of prescriber-identifiable data in healthcare research.

IMS Health, an entity that collects and sells prescriber data, challenged the law in the United States District Court in Vermont. The District Court upheld the law, finding that it was a valid and constitutional restriction on commercial speech, given Vermont’s asserted interests in both healthcare cost containment and public health. On appeal, the Second Circuit Court of Appeals reversed, finding that these justifications were inadequate. The Second Circuit ruled that the law violated the First Amendment by burdening the speech of pharmaceutical marketers and data mining entities. The United States Supreme Court granted certiorari in order to reconcile the conflict between the Second Circuit’s decision to strike down the Vermont law, and the First Circuit’s recent decision to uphold a similar New Hampshire law.

Supreme Court Ruling

In ruling in favor of IMS Health and affirming the Second Circuit, the Supreme Court first found that the text of the Vermont law constituted more than an incidental burden on speech, as it explicitly disfavored both specific speakers (pharmaceutical manufacturers) and specific contents of speech (marketing activities), and was thus subject to a “heightened” standard of judicial scrutiny. The Court also observed that the law’s legislative history clearly indicated that its express purpose was to diminish the effectiveness of brand-name pharmaceutical marketing efforts. Second, the Court concluded that the Vermont law directly regulated the content of that speech, and was therefore not solely a commercial regulation (whose constitutionality could have been analyzed using a level of judicial scrutiny more deferential to Vermont). Third, the Court ruled that the Vermont law restrained the use and dissemination of information about prescriber habits, and thus specifically burdened the marketing speech of pharmaceutical companies. As a result, the Court ruled that the Vermont law violated the First Amendment.

Futher, the Court noted that even if the Vermont law were viewed only as a limitation on commercial speech, the law still would have failed to pass constitutional muster, as it did not directly and proportionately advance any of Vermont’s asserted reasons for its necessity: physician privacy, healthcare cost control, or public health generally. First, the Court reasoned that the law could not be said to protect physician privacy, because the law still authorized pharmacies to share prescriber-identifying information with essentially anyone for any reason other than marketing. Second, the Court found that Vermont’s indirect approach to controlling healthcare costs — passing a law that restrained speech in an effort to diminish the perceived influence of detailing — constituted a disproportionate burden on free speech. Third, the Court emphasized that the dissemination of truthful information about pharmaceuticals may actually improve public health, by helping prescribers make more informed decisions. Indeed, the Court observed that far from being either false or misleading — two situations in which the Court has previously permitted limited regulation of commercial speech — there was no evidence that the “detailing” at issue here was anything but truthful. In conclusion, the Court observed that the mere fact that Vermont “finds [certain forms of] expression too persuasive does not permit [Vermont] to quiet the speech or to burden its messengers.”

In dissent, Justice Breyer (joined by Justices Ginsburg and Kagan) argued that although the Vermont law may have adversely affected speech, it did so only as part of a lawful governmental effort to regulate a commercial enterprise. Breyer emphasized that the prescriber information is only retained because pharmacists are required by law to do so, and argued that in such a situation, the First Amendment does not require the Court to apply a heightened level of judicial scrutiny. Breyer further argued that even if “intermediate” scrutiny were applied to the Vermont law (the legal standard that is usually applied to a review of restrictions on purely commercial speech), the Vermont law would have met this test. Breyer concluded that the law directly advanced Vermont’s substantial interest in public health because it would encourage detailing discussions that focused on safety, effectiveness, and cost, rather than on past prescribing history.

Outlook

The Supreme Court’s Sorrell decision is an important development for the pharmaceutical, medical device, biotechnology, and related sectors, because it confirms the legal right of industry sales staff to access prescriber-identifiable data for marketing and other purposes. The Sorrell ruling will almost certainly require a reexamination of similar statutory and regulatory restrictions in other states, particularly if those state laws burden the access to and use of this type of prescriber information.

Finally, it remains to be seen whether Sorrell represents a move toward granting commercial speech greater constitutional protections than it has been afforded in the past. The Court concluded that the Vermont law would have been unconstitutional under either the “intermediate” scrutiny standard traditionally applied to commercial speech regulations or the “heightened scrutiny” standard alluded to by the majority. However, the implication that a new “heightened” standard exists in the commercial speech context — and precisely what such a standard would look like in practice — is a development that merits being monitored closely.

 

FTC Red Flags Rule Clarified; Red Flags Enforcement Likely to Begin in 2011

By Brian Bialas

On December 18, 2010, President Obama signed into law the Red Flag Clarification Act of 2010.  The Act will change a single definition in prior law and reduce the scope of the FTC Red Flags Rule, ending a two-year long saga over the scope of its enforcement.

As we have noted in past entries about Red Flags Rule compliance, the FTC has extended the deadline for enforcement of the FTC's Red Flags Rule several times, most recently through December 31, 2010.  The stated reason for these delays was “to give Congress time to reach a consensus on the types of businesses that should be covered under the Rule.”  An unstated reason was the mounting number of lawsuits by physicians, lawyers, accountants, and other service providers seeking to exempt themselves from the Red Flags Rule.  The lawsuits should now come to an end.

Here’s how the new law will work. The definition of who is considered to be a “creditor” is a key to the application of the Red Flags Rule. As originally drafted, “creditors” would have included anyone “who regularly extends, renews, or continues credit” or “who regularly arranges for the extension, renewal, or continuation of credit,” 15 U.S.C. § 1691a(e); see 15 U.S.C. § 1681a(r)(5). The new Act narrows this definition by excluding anyone who advances funds on behalf of a person for expenses incidental to a service provided by the creditor to that person. Examples of this exclusion would include a doctor who pays upfront for a test that a patient will reimburse him for later, or a lawyer who covers a filing fee for a client until his bill is paid. 

With this change, it is likely that the FTC will commence enforcement against the intended targets of the Red Flags Rule – the financial services industry – in 2011. 

Will 2011 Bring Us "Do Not Track" Legislation?

Posted below is another contribution from my colleague David Broadwin on our Emerging Enterprise Center blog about the potential for legislative change in 2011. I agree with the conclusions he draws:

1)      This is an area where bipartisan concensus is possible.

2)      The industry powers will fight against “Do Not Track” and will win that fight.  

3)      Industry will accept some other form of regulation in exchange for defeating “Do Not Track.”

We could see passage of a federal data security and privacy statute, not unlike those that the various states have been adopting. The states have already passed models for such legislation and have shown that these increased protections can be implemented without too much opposition from the business sector. Also, adoption of a single standard for data security and privacy could actually relieve some of the regulatory burden on business: instead of having to comply with 50 different state laws, there would just be one federal law. This is the very same logic that led to the passage of HIPAA (and its standards for health information privacy) in 1996.

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"Creepy" is the new "cool" and how to make sure it stays that way
 
Posted by Dave Broadwin on December 14, 2010

The other day at Mass TLC’s Mobility Summit I had a brief conversation with Mark Herrmann (an entrepreneur here in Boston) that touched on the FTC’s recent proposal for protecting consumer privacy online.  We were talking about the “do not track” proposal and the consensus in the tech industry that it just won’t fly. 

Mark’s comment: 

“It is creepy that ‘they’ can and do track you out in the net, but ‘creepy is the new cool.’”  There is just no question that some people accept the fact that they are being tracked and fed targeted online advertising.  It is not just OK by them; it’s a value add.  I don’t disagree. But, for anyone who has read “1984” (and even a lot of people who haven’t) the notion of being tracked is creepy.  There are a lot of these folks – perhaps a significant majority of the U.S. population – that feel this way.

In 2011 the FTC and Congress are going to pay attention to these concerns. It is good politics. 

Prediction #1:  Legislation in this area will be one of the few places where we will see bipartisan consensus in the next Congress. 

Why: No Congressperson wants to be opposed to consumer privacy, and they all want to have supported some legislation that passed, when running in the next election. Mark (and others) made the point that if you really end tracking, you will end Facebook.  So, whatever happens it won’t be that.  However, the political snowball is rolling down the mountain - there will be regulatory activity around consumer privacy. The only question is: What will be the nature and scope of the activity? The big boys (those with well established businesses that either make money or have ready access to capital) are going to be lobbying hard for a regulatory framework that does not dent their current business model. 

Prediction #2:  The big boys will fight anything that disrupts tracking and they are going to win this battle – no one in Congress wants to run on the platform that they put Facebook (or others) out of business. But the big boys are going to have to trade something.  The easy things for them to trade are procedural protections for the consumer. 

  • The FTC wants the industry to adopt “privacy by design” principles.  This means that companies should adopt internal processes to promote consumer privacy and security protections into their daily practices and to consider privacy issues at every stage of design and development of products and services.
  • The FTC wants the industry to make consumer data more available to consumers.  This means allowing for increased consumer access to data collected. 

Prediction #3:  The big boys will trade lots of procedural protections for the consumer to prevent substantive regulation that will directly affect their business models. 

Why:  The big boys can afford the administrative burden implicit in procedural protections.  It is just a matter of more money, more people and more oversight.  A company that is well established and profitable or that has easy access to capital can afford to write the code, hire an army of new engineers, consultants, lawyers etc. and create an entire Department of Privacy Compliance and Protection.  In fact, to the extent that having to do all that makes it harder for start-ups, it may even be helpful to the established companies. Some folks I talk to have expressed real concern about this looming regulatory push and how it might affect the entire ecosystem for digital media start-ups. There is still a chance to influence the inevitable regulation that is upcoming and I am working on assembling a group of industry leaders to do just that.  I recently sent out a letter (here’s a link) to people I thought might be concerned enough to actually do something.

Read it and let me know what you think.

Connecticut Attorney General Reaches First State HIPAA Settlement with Health Net

On July 6, 2010, Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal announced a settlement with Health Net and its affiliates (Health Net of the Northeast, Inc., Health Net of Connecticut Inc., and parent companies UnitedHealth Group Inc. and Oxford Health Plans.) of a suit that cited failure to secure private patient medical records and financial information on nearly a half million Connecticut enrollees and promptly notify consumers endangered by the breach.

 

The settlement marks the first action by a state attorney general for violations of HIPAA since the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health ("HITECH") Act authorized state attorneys general to enforce HIPAA.  The settlement includes two years of consumer credit monitoring, $1 million of identity theft insurance and reimbursement for the costs of security freezes. Under the settlement, Health Net and its affiliates also agreed to:

 

· A “Corrective Action Plan” in which Health Net is implementing several measures to protect health information and other private data in compliance with HIPAA. This plan includes continued identity theft protection, improved systems controls, improved management and oversight structures, improved training and awareness for its employees, and improved incentives, monitoring, and reports.

· A $250,000 payment to the state representing statutory damages.

· An additional contingent payment to the state of $500,000, should it be established that the lost disk drive was accessed and personal information used illegally, impacting plan members.

Massachusetts Attorney General Announces Opening of New Computer Forensics Lab

In a press release issued last week, Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley announced the opening of a "new, state-of-the-art Computer Forensics Lab in Boston" as part of the Attorney General's Cyber Crime Initiative.  Under the Initiative, the Attorney General's office received funding from the U.S. Department of Justive to "develop a sustainable cyber crime information sharing program in Massachusetts" for the Massachusetts law inforcement community.

According to the press release, the lab "will expand the office's forensic capabilities, allowing it to conduct exams on a variety of digital media such as computers, cell phones, laptops, PDAs and GPS devices."  The lab is 3,000 square feet and is the largest of its size for any attorney general's office in New England.  It will have the latest technology available to forensic investigators to allow them to extract information such as text messages, videos and pictures from mobile devices, and will also have imaging machines that can be used to capture information that cannot be extracted from a device or hard drive.  In addition, lab space will be used to train police officers on how to "bag and tag," using the proper techniques for evidence seizure at a crime scene. 

According to the press release, the Attorney General's Office has trained more than 1,000 Massachusetts law enforcement officers and cyber crime experts from across the nation, focusing primarily on investigation of identity theft.  While it certainly seems that Attorney General Coakley has made prevention of cyber-crime one of her top priorities (indeed, the office recently received and award from the National White Collar Crime Center for its work in cyber crime), it will be interesting to see what happens if she is successful in her candidacy for the U.S. Senate.

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Cracking Down: FCC Initiates Enforcement Action Against Hundreds of Telecommunications Carriers For Failing to Certify Compliance With Customer Privacy Rules

On Tuesday, February 24, 2009, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) issued an Omnibus Notice of Apparent Liability alleging that more than 600 telecommunications carriers have violated Section 222 of the Communications Act which "imposes the general duty on all telecommunications carriers to protect the confidentiality of their subscribers' proprietary information" and the EPIC Customer Proprietary Network Information (CPNI) Order (22 FCC Rcd 6927), which requires each carrier to certify compliance with the regulations governing customer information.  FCC Chairman Michael J. Copps issued a public statement addressing the enforcement action and highlighting that the FCC "continued to mconsumer privacy protection a top priority.  The FCC seeks a $20,000 fine from each of the carriers (around $13 million in total) and has stated that it moderated the amount of the fines because the carriers were small companies and because this was the first year of the certification requirement (certifications were due March 1, 2008).  As the FCC warns in its official Notice, "[t]o the extent that we determine that the proposed forfeiture adpoted herein does not have the intended deterrent effect, future noncompliance will face more severe penalties." 

If you've been looking for signs of how the Obama administration intends to enforce privacy and information security regulations, here is one of a few early signs that federal regulators are under orders to step up enforcement efforts and are begining with the backlog of violations from 2008. 

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