
A new Senate bill seeks to expand health data privacy protections.
After Roe’s reversal, activists and data privacy experts
Should it pass, the bill would give consumers more ownership over their health data and restrict companies’ ability to collect or use personal health information without consumer consent. Additionally, it would ban the use of personally identifying data for advertising whether that be collected from consumers, fitness trackers, medical centers, or browsing history.
The legislation was introduced by Democratic Senators Amy Klobuchar, Elizabeth Warren, and Mazie Hirono. “Since the reversal of Roe, data brokers and tech firms have continued to profit from the private health and location data of millions of Americans, including those seeking reproductive health care services,” said Warren
After Roe’s reversal,
“With Republicans working to ban and criminalize reproductive health care nationwide, it’s critical we safeguard the reproductive data privacy of everyone in our country,” said Hirono in a statement. “Everyone should be able to trust that personal data about their bodies and their health care will be protected.”
The bill was only just introduced, in the meantime,