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Aetna Exposes HIV Statuses of Thousands of Customers

Aetna

A mailing error affected 12,000 of the insurance company's patients from California to Washington, D.C.

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Insurance giant Aetna is trying to respond to an accidental release of thousands of customers' HIV statuses, which were clearly visible through envelope windows.

The privacy breach affected 12,000 customers across the nation, in eight states and the District of Columbia. Aetna has informed all customers affected, apologized, and blamed the mistake on a third-party vendor that mailed the notices. The letters often shifted in their envelopes and showed whether patients were taking HIV medications or pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), which prevents HIV. Patients' family members and their mail carriers could have been exposed to that private information.

"This type of mistake is unacceptable," the company said in a statement, according to Bloomberg News. "We sincerely apologize to those affected by a mailing issue that inadvertently exposed the personal health information of some Aetna members."

Aetna said it would work to make sure such an error never occurs again, but didn't mention anything about compensation. Groups like Legal Action Center, the AIDS Law Project of Pennsylvania, and Lambda Legal blasted Aetna and said the company exposed patients to HIV stigma, which is still very much alive and "creates a tangible risk of violence, discrimination and other trauma," Sally Friedman of the Legal Action Center told The Washington Post.

*UPDATED: A reader affected by Aetna's error says he was never contacted by the company and says the contents of the letter were clear to anyone seeing the envelope, regardless of the contents "shifting."

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Neal Broverman

Neal Broverman is the Editorial Director, Print of Pride Media, publishers of The Advocate, Out, Out Traveler, and Plus, spending more than 20 years in journalism. He indulges his interest in transportation and urban planning with regular contributions to Los Angeles magazine, and his work has also appeared in the Los Angeles Times and USA Today. He lives in the City of Angels with his husband, children, and their chiweenie.
Neal Broverman is the Editorial Director, Print of Pride Media, publishers of The Advocate, Out, Out Traveler, and Plus, spending more than 20 years in journalism. He indulges his interest in transportation and urban planning with regular contributions to Los Angeles magazine, and his work has also appeared in the Los Angeles Times and USA Today. He lives in the City of Angels with his husband, children, and their chiweenie.