While I agree that they probably aren't, their intended customer base is.
And even so, nothing precludes people from pursuing civil damages if there's a data breach - this is far more likely with sensitive data coming from a medical provider to a third party.
And as has been hinted at, the lack of professional presentation is going to hurt a lot, and people will immediately ask "can I trust this platform with any of my information?"
Probably not even a data breach. A user's friend/relative who is a lawyer or works in health care or know someone who does will see the app and inmediately begin proceedings for a lawsuit. Once it is under the eye of the state, OP will be in big legal trouble. Building apps is cool but any app that uses critical stuff like real world infrastructure or personal data needs careful treading
> A user's friend/relative who is a lawyer or works in health care or know someone who does will see the app and inmediately begin proceedings for a lawsuit
Why? What's in it for them?
I'm not saying this can't happen, I'm just not sure I understand why you think it's so likely to happen.
This is literally an app that asks for your confidential medical information. My not-a-lawyer interpretation of the law is that it probably is not covered by HIPAA (to be a "business associate" you need to have a direct financial relationship with a covered entity, i.e., a medical provider), but your snark is pretty reductionist.
While I agree that they probably aren't, their intended customer base is.
And even so, nothing precludes people from pursuing civil damages if there's a data breach - this is far more likely with sensitive data coming from a medical provider to a third party.
And as has been hinted at, the lack of professional presentation is going to hurt a lot, and people will immediately ask "can I trust this platform with any of my information?"
Probably not even a data breach. A user's friend/relative who is a lawyer or works in health care or know someone who does will see the app and inmediately begin proceedings for a lawsuit. Once it is under the eye of the state, OP will be in big legal trouble. Building apps is cool but any app that uses critical stuff like real world infrastructure or personal data needs careful treading
> A user's friend/relative who is a lawyer or works in health care or know someone who does will see the app and inmediately begin proceedings for a lawsuit
Why? What's in it for them?
I'm not saying this can't happen, I'm just not sure I understand why you think it's so likely to happen.
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> Kate's App is a tool created to support medical caregivers and the people they care for
Seems like it is intended to be used by covered entities. But it does depend a bit on what "medical caregiver" is intended to mean.
That's not for any of us to determine here. A lawyer can answer that.
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This is literally an app that asks for your confidential medical information. My not-a-lawyer interpretation of the law is that it probably is not covered by HIPAA (to be a "business associate" you need to have a direct financial relationship with a covered entity, i.e., a medical provider), but your snark is pretty reductionist.
I doubt they are.
No.