In a statement, LabMD said the company "looks forward to vigorously fighting against the FTC's overreach by seeking recourse through the available legal processes."
Jessica Rich, director of the FTC's bureau of consumer protection, said LabMD's practices put consumers at serious risk of identity theft.
"The FTC is committed to ensuring that firms who collect that data use reasonable and appropriate security measures to prevent it from falling into the hands of identity thieves and other unauthorized users," she said in a statement.
More than half of doctors' offices and 4 out of 5 hospitals have transitioned from paper to electronic medical records, according to the government. Moving to computerized records is the rare consensus issue in healthcare, enjoying support from across the political spectrum. Taxpayers have already contributed more than $14 billion to help speed the move through an incentive program that was part of the Obama administration's economic stimulus package.
The hope was that going digital would make caring for patients safer and less costly by helping avoid medical mistakes and cutting down on duplicative tests. But concerns have also surfaced about patient privacy and vulnerability to fraud. And progress has been mixed in getting medical computers from different offices to talk to each other, the key to a seamlessly efficient system.
A pair of reports in 2011 by HHS' inspector general warned that the drive to connect hospitals and doctors electronically was being layered on top of a system that already has privacy problems. The administration said in response it would pursue stronger safeguards.
The complaint filed Thursday means that the allegations will be tried in a formal hearing before an administrative law judge. The FTC wants the judge to order LabMD to institute a comprehensive information security program with professional audits every two years for the next 20 years. The proposed order also would require LabMD to notify consumers whose information was compromised.
LabMD founder Michael Daugherty has objected to these terms and has been fighting the FTC investigation for several years. He claims on his personal website that LabMD is a victim of theft by a cybersecurity firm that he says was trying to sell his company services. Daugherty says that when he refused, the stolen data was supplied to government regulators, who are using the leak to punish him as a small business owner and justify additional government regulation. Daugherty has written a book on the subject that he says will be published in September.
The trade commission's "enforcement action against LabMD based, in part, on the alleged actions of Internet trolls, is yet another example of the FTC's pattern of abusing its authority to engage in an ongoing witch hunt against private businesses," LabMD said in its statement.
According to the FTC complaint, a LabMD spreadsheet with insurance billing data on more than 9,000 consumers was discovered on a public file-sharing network. The spreadsheet contained Social Security numbers, birth dates, insurance information and medical treatment codes. The FTC says California police later discovered that identity thieves had acquired personal data from at least 500 LabMD consumers.
In its complaint, the FTC said lax security controls at LabMD resulted in the leak of the spreadsheet. Regulators say the company did not maintain a "comprehensive data security program" or use "readily available measures" to identify common vulnerabilities. The company also did not adequately train employees or prevent unauthorized access, according to the FTC.