← NewsAll
Kaiser settles $46 million lawsuit over patient data.
Summary
Kaiser Permanente has agreed to a $46 million settlement in a lawsuit alleging that patient data from its websites was shared with third parties; the settlement is pending court approval and claims must be filed by March 12, 2026.
Content
Kaiser Permanente has agreed to a $46 million settlement in a lawsuit that alleges patient data from its websites was shared with outside parties. Plaintiffs said information generated during use of certain patient-facing online services between 2017 and 2024 was transmitted in ways that could be associated with individual users. Kaiser has disputed that patient privacy was violated and said it removed some technologies "out of an abundance of caution." The company characterized the settlement as a business decision and the agreement does not include an admission of wrongdoing.
Key facts:
- What was reported: The lawsuit alleges that data from interactions on certain Kaiser websites was transmitted to third parties and could be linked to individual users.
- Current status: The parties have agreed to a $46 million settlement to resolve the claims; the settlement is subject to final court approval and Kaiser denies liability.
- Next procedural step: The court-approved notice sets a claims filing deadline of March 12, 2026, and any payments will depend on the number of valid claims submitted.
Summary:
The settlement is intended to resolve allegations about sharing of patient-facing website data with outside vendors and ends the active dispute if the court approves the deal. The agreement includes no admission of wrongdoing, and eligible individuals must file claims by March 12, 2026; details about payments will depend on how many valid claims are received.
