Digital Health & Technology
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March 01, 2024
Gov't Says AI Patent Gap Between US And China Is Growing
A report by a U.S. federal agency says that people living in China have been granted more patents than people living in the U.S., and the latest figures suggest an especially widening gap in patents issued over artificial intelligence.
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March 01, 2024
LGBTQ+ Org. Seeks To Ward Off Paxton's Documents Demand
An LGBTQ+ advocacy group has sued Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton and his office over a civil investigative demand for documents in connection with a state law banning gender-affirming care for transgender youths, saying the demand violates the organization's and its members' constitutional rights.
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March 01, 2024
Cannabis Consulting Co. Says Clinic Owes $101K On Contract
A laboratory and consulting firm that focuses on the cannabis industry alleged that a Michigan clinic owes the firm more than $100,000 for unpaid services, according to a lawsuit filed in Colorado federal court.
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March 01, 2024
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
This past week in London has seen a legal battle between confectionary heavyweight Mars Wrigley UK and a frozen food manufacturer, a trademark infringement claim by Abbott Diabetes Care over glucose monitoring meters, Mercedes-Benz Group hit with two commercial fraud disputes, and the Mediterranean Shipping Company tackle a cargo claim by an insurance company. Here, Law360 looks at these and other new claims in the U.K.
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February 29, 2024
Medtronic Expands Its Bladder Device Patent Fight
Medical device conglomerate Medtronic has opened two more fronts in its fight over a new kind of "neuromodulation solution" for bladder and bowel control issues that's at the center of its ongoing intellectual property dispute with a newer and smaller rival, a recent acquisition of Boston Scientific.
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February 29, 2024
UnitedHealth Unit Says Blackcat Group Behind Cyberattack
A UnitedHealth unit on Thursday announced that the "Blackcat" ransomware group is behind a cyberattack that has taken out its information technology systems and services for the past nine days.
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February 29, 2024
Medtronic Says 3 Years Of Tax Returns Under IRS Audit
Three years of medical device company Medtronic's federal income tax returns are being audited by the Internal Revenue Service, the company said in a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filing.
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February 28, 2024
Biotech Co., Ex-Exec And Investor To Pay $5.2M In SEC Suit
A New York federal judge entered final judgments against medical device company RenovaCare, its controlling shareholder, and its former chief operating officer to settle a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission suit accusing them of artificially inflating RenovaCare's stock price, ordering them to pay a total of $5.2 million.
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February 28, 2024
Attys Get $750K Fee Award In $6M Med Tech Co. Deal
Class attorneys for minority shareholders of Autonomous Medical Devices Inc. who secured a $6 million settlement to resolve claims about a purportedly underpriced stock sale to an interest of Oracle founder Larry J. Ellison won court approval of the settlement Wednesday, along with a requested $750,000 fee award.
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February 28, 2024
WilmerHale Adds Ex-Medtronic Legal Leader To Its DC Office
WilmerHale has hired for its Washington, D.C., office an attorney who helped build the global trade legal department at healthcare technology company Medtronic.
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February 28, 2024
Dexcom Rival Fights Its Bid To Tweak Glucose Monitor Patent
A Korean medical tech company has asked a London court to block Dexcom's bid to tweak its diabetes management patent to avoid losing protections should the court rule that it's invalid.
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February 28, 2024
NuVasive Can Pierce Co. To Collect From Ex-Rep, Judge Says
NuVasive Inc. can pierce the corporate veil to collect a $617,000-plus arbitration judgment it won against a company operated by one of its former sales representatives who improperly cut ties with the medical device company and violated his noncompete agreement, a Boston federal judge has ruled.
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February 27, 2024
Last-Minute Settlement Stops 2nd Catheter Trial In Del.
A second legal fight over patents that cover a type of external catheter for women will not be going before a jury in Wilmington after the two feuding rivals agreed on Tuesday to settle the dispute.
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February 27, 2024
10th Circ. Backs FDA E-Cigarettes Marketing Denial
The Tenth Circuit on Tuesday upheld the U.S. Food and Drug Administration's denials of two companies' applications to market flavored e-cigarettes, rejecting their argument that the agency secretly planned to reject any applications without long-term studies.
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February 27, 2024
Survey Finds Just 4 in 10 Healthcare Orgs. Review AI Guidance
Only 40% of healthcare professionals surveyed by the Berkeley Research Group say their organizations are reviewing or plan to review regulatory guidance on artificial intelligence, even as they expect rapid growth in AI deployment over the next three years, according to a report released Tuesday.
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February 26, 2024
NC Health Data Breach Class Deal Gets Preliminary OK
A North Carolina state judge has preliminarily approved a settlement resolving a class action against an orthopedic practice over a data breach that compromised sensitive personal information and medical records of current and former patients.
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February 26, 2024
UnitedHealth Unit Hits 6th Day Of IT Outage After Cyberattack
A UnitedHealth Group unit on Monday entered its sixth day of dealing with a cyberattack that breached its information technology systems and services spanning pharmacy claims billing, medical records and payor communications software.
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February 26, 2024
NC Hospital's Weak Data Security Led To Breach, Suit Says
A patient filed a proposed class action in North Carolina's business court alleging a hospital system's inadequate data security resulted in a breach that allowed hackers to access private personal and health information.
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February 23, 2024
Seattle Hospital Gets Facebook Browser Tracking Suit Tossed
A Washington state judge sided with Seattle Children's Hospital on Friday, throwing out a proposed class action accusing the healthcare provider of privacy law violations and agreeing the group of parents hadn't shown how the use of a browser tracking tool on its website disclosed confidential patient information to Facebook.
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February 23, 2024
Chamber's Report Bemoans Biden's March-In Idea For Drug IP
The most powerful business lobbying group in the U.S. said that although the country ranked at the top of its annual International IP Index, the Biden administration's efforts to potentially use patent laws to reduce the price of pharmaceuticals would jeopardize its place down the line.
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February 23, 2024
Fla. Doctor Says T-Mobile Let Hacker Steal Her SIM Card
A Tampa, Florida, doctor has sued T-Mobile for allegedly failing to stop a "SIM swap" hacker from transferring her personal phone account and then doing little to address the identity theft that followed, which involved the hacker trying to steal thousands from her retirement account and using her medical credentials to write more than 700 fraudulent prescriptions.
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February 23, 2024
Healthcare AI Startup Abridge Raises $150M
AI clinical documentation company Abridge said on Friday that it had raised a $150 million series C round to build on its existing product lines and accelerate research and development.
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February 22, 2024
HHS' Civil Rights Office Reaches 2nd-Ever Ransomware Deal
The Department of Health and Human Services has reached a deal with a Maryland-based behavioral health practice over a ransomware attack that affected the protected health information of nearly 15,000 individuals.
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February 22, 2024
HHS Warning to Congress: Health Data Breaches Surging
The number of large data breaches exposing protected health information more than doubled in a recent five-year period, reaching 626 incidents in 2022 that affected nearly 42 million people, federal officials said Thursday.
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February 22, 2024
Mich. Judge OKs $52M Deal For Mayo Foundation Subscribers
A Michigan federal judge on Wednesday gave the initial approval to a $52 million deal for subscribers to the Mayo Foundation's health magazine who allege the publisher shared their private information without consent.
Expert Analysis
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The Regulatory Growing Pains For Digital Health Companies
The meteoric rise of digital health services during the pandemic has been matched with increasing regulatory scrutiny in the U.S. and abroad, resulting in a patchwork of laws and approaches that could leave a damper on the industry's growth, say attorneys at Kobre & Kim.
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Policyholder Best Practices As Cyberattacks Escalate
As ransomware attacks increasingly target corporate victims, policyholders should enhance cybersecurity and privacy efforts to avoid regulatory hot water and mitigate the effects of rising insurance premiums and coverage restrictions, say Lee Epstein and Krishna Jani at Flaster Greenberg.
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Navigating Asia-Pacific Health M&A In The Wake Of COVID
Bernard Lui and Vanessa Ng at Morgan Lewis discuss new legal considerations for participants in health care mergers and acquisitions with entities in Singapore and elsewhere throughout the Asia-Pacific region as the pandemic continues.
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Life Sci Cos. Should Prep For Enforcement After COVID Pause
With the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and other federal agencies beginning to turn their sights back to pre-COVID-19 agendas, now is the time for life sciences companies to proactively address certain key areas that are likely to draw enforcement action, including physician speaker programs and data integrity, say attorneys at Buchanan Ingersoll.
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4 Considerations In Light Of Cyber Incident Notification Bill
Following the recent introduction of a bipartisan bill that would require government contractors and critical infrastructure operators to report cyber intrusions to the federal government within 24 hours, companies should take several steps to assess their preparedness for identifying vulnerabilities and mitigating the risk of cyberattacks, say attorneys at Squire Patton.
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What COVID-19, Social Issues Mean For Pharma Case Juries
Recent surveys of actual and potential jurors suggest that the turbulence of this time will likely affect the attitudes of juries in pharmaceutical and life science cases in at least five different ways, say Buffy Mims and Rachel Horton at DLA Piper, and Rick Fuentes at R&D Strategic Solutions.
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Health Cos. Must Prepare For Growing Ransomware Threat
Health companies are a prime target for ransomware attacks due to their sensitive data and relative vulnerability, so they will need compliance and resilience to guard against the increasingly varied ways that hackers can attempt to extract funds, say Alaap Shah and Stuart Gerson at Epstein Becker.
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Medical Device Cases Show Increased Sunshine Act Scrutiny
Recent U.S. Department of Justice and Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services settlements with two medical device manufacturers signal ramped-up enforcement of the Sunshine Act, highlighting a departure from a historically gentler approach, say Jaime Jones and Brenna Jenny at Sidley.
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Compliance Considerations For Pharma Co. Testing Programs
Diagnostic tests sponsored by pharmaceutical companies can provide real benefits to patients, but should be carefully structured to mitigate compliance risks related to possible fraud and patient privacy, say Eve Brunts and Alison Fethke at Ropes & Gray.
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Gov't Authorities Should Assist Ransomware Targets
As more companies make the prudent decision to pay ransoms following cyberattacks — recently demonstrated by Colonial Pipeline's decision to make a multimillion-dollar payment — governments should use these opportunities to identify and punish perpetrators, rather than simply admonishing victims, say attorneys at Clifford Chance.
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Bracing For The Next Wave Of Health Care Enforcement
Health companies should take proactive steps against a coming wave of federal enforcement, in light of massive new health funding, agencies' desire to protect COVID-19 relief funds, increased use of data analytics and a likely rise in qui tam suits, say attorneys at Foley & Lardner.
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Indoor Air Pollution Fix Will Require New Laws, New Tech
The COVID-19 pandemic, an aging population and changing workplace dynamics all foretell more exposure to indoor air pollutants, so a multidisciplinary policy approach combining technology, insurance, funding and regulation will be needed to improve indoor air quality and health, says Ann Al-Bahish at Haynes and Boone.
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How Justices' AMG Ruling Affects Privacy And Cybersecurity
The U.S. Supreme Court's recent ruling in AMG Capital Management v. Federal Trade Commission removes the regulator's ability to seek monetary damages that discouraged privacy and cybersecurity breaches, and as a result, companies should reassess their exposure in these areas, say attorneys at Orrick.