VUMC Complaint
VUMC Complaint
VUMC Complaint
7/24/2023 5:27 PM
CLERK & MASTER
DAVIDSON CO. CHANCERY CT.
v.
JURY DEMAND
VANDERBILT UNIVERSITY MEDICAL
CENTER,
Defendant.
1. The State of Tennessee has been negatively targeting the transgender community
for years. As part of that campaign, in late 2022 and early 2023, the Tennessee Attorney General
suddenly demanded that the Vanderbilt University Medical Center Transgender Health Clinic
(“VUMC”) turn over its patients’ medical records. VUMC knew about the State’s active targeting
of the transgender community. It had a duty to protect their medical information and their
identities. Nevertheless, without its patients’ knowledge, VUMC turned over non-anonymized
medical records for more than 100 current and former patients without redacting their identities.
In turning over this information, VUMC failed its contractual and legal duties, failed its patients,
and has caused them serious harm. Plaintiffs are among the many victims. They bring this Class
Action Complaint against VUMC to vindicate their rights and those of the other innocent victims.
1
PARTIES
health information (“PHI”) was disclosed to the AG.1 Patient 1’s health coverage is through a state-
sponsored insurance plan. Patient 1 is a citizen of Tennessee and pursues this claim under a
pseudonym to protect their confidential identity and for fear of harassment from members of the
public and the government that have indicated hostility to patients like Patient 1 that receive care
3. PATIENT 2 (“Patient 2”) received the notification that confidential PHI was
disclosed to the AG. Patient 2’s health coverage was through a state-sponsored insurance plan.
Patient 2 is a citizen of Tennessee and pursues this claim under a pseudonym to protect their
confidential identity and for fear of harassment from members of the public and the government
that have indicated hostility to patients like Patient 2 that receive care through healthcare providers
providing healthcare services in Davidson County and throughout the Middle Tennessee region. It
is a leading provider of health care to transgender individuals in this region. It maintains its
principal place of business at 1161 21st Ave. S Medical Center North D-3300, Nashville, TN
37232. It may be served via its Registered Agent, National Registered Agents, Inc., 300 Montvue
1
One of the harms alleged in this Complaint involves VUMC disclosing highly sensitive personal
health information without the knowledge or consent of the individuals who received that care.
For obvious reason, Plaintiffs in this matter are therefore suing pseudonymously.
2
JURISDICTION AND VENUE
5. This Court has jurisdiction over this proceeding pursuant to T.C.A. § 16-11-101
because a substantial amount of the actions and inactions giving rise to these claims occurred in
transitory action for declaratory relief and all or a substantial portion of the actions and inactions
that gave rise to these claims occurred within this County. Venue is also proper under T.C.A. § 16-
11-115.
FACTUAL ALLEGATIONS
I. Tennessee’s Current Governor and General Assembly Have a Long and Well-
Known Record of Targeting Transgender Individuals.
Tennessee General Assembly and the Governor. Since 2015, Tennessee has enacted more anti-
7. The General Assembly and the Governor have enacted a record number of anti-
LGBTQ+ pieces of legislation in recent years – all passed by the General Assembly and quickly
2
ICYMI: Governor Lee Signed Tennessee’s Fourth Anti-Transgender Sports Ban into Law;
Making it the State’s 15th Anti-LGBTQ+ Law Since 2015 - Human Rights Campaign (hrc.org)
(last visited June 29, 2023).
3
Tennessee sued over transgender ‘bathroom bill’ for public schools | PBS NewsHour; Tennessee
to mandate bathroom signs about transgender use | AP News (last visited July 24, 2023).
4
Tennessee General Assembly Legislation (tn.gov) (last visited June 30, 2023).
3
c. In 2023, bills: (1) against drag (SB 3/HB 9); (2) allowing private schools to prohibit
transgender athletes from participating in school sports (HB 306/SB 1237); (3)
deeming sex at birth an “immutable” characteristic (HB 239/SB 1440); (4) allowing
intentional misgendering of transgender individuals and excluding LGBTQ+
people from protection under Tennessee’s non-discrimination laws (HB 1269 / SB
466).
II. The Attorney General of the State of Tennessee Repeatedly Targets the
Transgender Community.
(“AG”) and Reporter on September 1, 2022.5 Almost immediately, he joined the Governor and
General Assembly in targeting people who are (or are perceived to be) transgender.
9. On September 12, 2022, one of his first acts upon taking office was to lead other
attorneys general in objecting to efforts of the U.S. Department of Education to include gender
10. On October 12, 2022, AG Skrmetti again led other attorneys general in demanding
that federal Attorney General Merrick Garland “stand down” in the face of statements regarding
pediatric gender dysphoria treatments that Skrmetti admitted would “provoke” threats.7
11. On February 15, 2023, AG Skrmetti joined other attorneys general in an amicus
brief defending Florida’s laws prohibiting transgender athletes from participating on women’s and
girls’ teams.8
5
Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti (tn.gov) (last visited July 24, 2023).
6
AG Skrmetti Leads State AG Response to U.S. Department of Education’s Proposed Regulations;
Redefinition of “Sex” (tn.gov) (last visited June 25, 2023).
7
AG Skrmetti Leads Thirteen State Coalition Demanding U.S. Department of Justice Respect Free
Speech Rights of Critics of Irreversible Pediatric Transgender Procedures (tn.gov) (last visited
June 25, 2023).
8
TN AG Skrmetti Joins Multistate Coalition in Support of Florida Law Preserving Girls’ Sports
Teams for Biological Females (last visited June 25, 2023).
4
12. On April 11, 2023, AG Skrmetti again joined other states’ attorneys general in an
amicus brief supporting Florida’s ban on Medicaid funds for gender transitioning procedures.9
13. On June 7, 2023, AG Skrmetti praised a bill that would define sex an “immutable”
characteristic, saying that “[t]his is an issue that really matters to us. We're fighting hard. This,
whether we want it to be or not, is a huge legal battle — and it looks like it will be for a while to
come.”10 To help fight the attorney general’s “huge legal battle[s],” Skrmetti added a $2.5 million,
III. The Attorney General Requested Personally Identifying Records for Transgender
and Perceived as Transgender Patients from VUMC.
14. On September 21, 2022 – while the AG was actively litigating cases seeking to
curtail or diminish the rights of the transgender community – the conservative commentator Matt
Walsh made inflammatory claims about services provided by VUMC.12 Walsh did not mention
Medicaid fraud. Tennessee’s elected leaders, including the Governor, could not point to specific
laws that they thought VUMC had violated.13 In response, VUMC asserted that it hadn’t broken
any laws.14 Nevertheless, in reaction to the tweets, Governor Lee publicly called for an
9
TN AG Skrmetti Joins Brief Supporting Florida’s Ban on Medicaid Funds for Gender
Transitioning Procedures (last visited June 25, 2023).
10
Attorney General praises new state law defining sexes to avoid 'corruption of language'
(tennessean.com) (last visited June 25, 2023).
11
Attorney General beefs up office to take on feds, cities – Tennessee Lookout (last visited June
25, 2023).
12
Social media posts spark calls to investigate Tenn.'s VUMC | AP News (last visited July 24,
2023).
13
https://apnews.com/article/health-business-tennessee-nashville-vanderbilt-university-
6deb93f7dea92f1b2082c39f72b59766 (last visited July 24, 2023).
14
Gov. Lee calls for investigation into VUMC clinic (wkrn.com) (last visited July 24, 2023).
5
15. The AG obliged. On November 2, 2022, the AG issued his first Civil Investigative
17. CID 1 then demanded VUMC produce the following medical records:
15
https://apnews.com/article/health-business-tennessee-nashville-vanderbilt-university-
6deb93f7dea92f1b2082c39f72b59766
6
18. The attachment contained 106 entries of individual patients without explanation as
19. The list included individuals who are: (1) on the state employees’ health plan and
their family members, and (2) people who receive their health care through TennCare.
20. Some of the VUMC patients whose records were disclosed were not even patients
21. On March 14, 2023, the AG issued a second CID (“CID 2”). CID 2 requested
additional information and contained a similar exhibit with 106 entries. VUMC knew that it had
not broken any laws, and that the motivation for the investigation was a Tweet thread from a Daily
Wire columnist. VUMC was also aware of the anti-transgender agenda of the Governor, General
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Assembly, and AG. At a minimum, VUMC should have pushed back on the AG’s request for
22. Nevertheless, it appears that instead of pushing back, VUMC simply complied with
the AG’s demand and turned over all requested records. Those records included the personally
identifying information of its patients and some of the most intimate details of their private lives.
VUMC did not inform its affected patients that it had done this.
23. On March 14, 2023 (that same day), the AG issued a third CID (“CID 3”). CID 3
dramatically expanded the scope of the requests from CID 1 and 2. It included a request that
VUMC produce “All communications between Dr. Melissa Ciperski and anyone working at
24. Centerstone is a well-known mental health treatment facility that provides mental
16
Gov. Lee: Claims against Vanderbilt transgender health clinic ‘warrants a thorough
investigation’ (wsmv.com) (last visited June 26, 2023).
8
26. As this list indicates, CID 3 included wildly overbroad records requests that
exceeded even the stated nature of the investigation. For example, it requested records for all
patients who were referred to the VUMC Center for transgender health – even if they never had
more than an initial office visit. It further requested all communications to or from a certain VUMC
email address – regardless of whether the communications involved patients who had used
9
27. Thus, on its face, CID 3 far exceeded any information the AG would have
reasonably required to investigate claims under Tennessee’s Medicaid False Claims Act or any
28. VUMC turned over its patients’ medical files in response to one or more of these
CIDs. At the time, VUMC was aware of the parade of anti-LGTBQ+ legislation in Tennessee over
the past few years. Against that backdrop, its failure to safeguard the privacy of its patients is
particularly egregious.
29. VUMC therefore knew that the state of Tennessee was targeting transgender people
based on their transgender status. This alone should have given VUMC pause in turning over
personally identifying medical records with confidential PHI to the entity targeting its transgender
patients – but inexplicably it did not. Instead, in response to the AG’s CID, it appears that VUMC
IV. Federal Law Required VUMC to Keep Plaintiffs’ Medical Information Private.
30. The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (“HIPAA”) sets out
security provisions and data privacy responsibilities designed to keep patients’ medical
Simplification Rules, establish national standards for electronic transactions and code sets to
31. HIPAA provides specific privacy rules that require comprehensive administrative,
physical, and technical safeguards to ensure the confidentiality, integrity, and security of PHI is
properly maintained.
17
HIPAA lists 18 types of information that qualify as PHI according to guidance from the
Department of Health and Human Services Office for Civil Rights, and includes, inter alia: names,
addresses, any dates including dates of birth, Social Security numbers, and medical record
numbers.
10
32. Under federal law, VUMC is only able to produce PHI pursuant to a CID under the
following circumstances:
(1) The information sought is relevant and material to a legitimate law enforcement
inquiry;
(2) The request is specific and limited in scope to the extent reasonably practicable in
light of the purpose for which the information is sought; and
33. This regulation required VUMC to, at a minimum conduct a review and/or an
a. Any PHI produced pursuant to any of the CIDs issued by the AG only contain
relevant and material information;
b. The AG’s attempt to obtain the data was for a “legitimate” law enforcement need;
d. VUMC understood the purpose for why the AG sought the information and that
any response was limited in scope to that purpose; and
35. The information that VUMC released to the AG included the most sensitive and
confidential medical information that its patients have. This could include the following types of
information:
a. Pictures of genitalia;
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d. Private communications with clinicians that the patient may not have disclosed to
anyone else in the world;
e. Sexual history;
h. Medication history;
36. The disclosure of this information threatens (and as described below, actually has
caused) severe mental, psychological, and emotional trauma. Many of these individuals work for
the State of Tennessee itself – or are adult children or spouses of those state employees. They have
now had their private medical information and identities disclosed to the State of Tennessee. The
Tennessee AG office alone has over 350 employees and a budget of over $47 million. That does
not include employees and officials in other departments with whom those 350+ employees
37. In a state that has become increasingly hostile to the LGTBQ+ community, many
of these individuals came to the VUMC transgender health clinic as a safe space. VUMC betrayed
their trust.
V. VUMC Fails to Adequately Protect Patient Data in Compliance with State Law
and its Own Privacy Policy.
38. Plaintiffs and members of the proposed Class are VUMC’s current and former
patients whose PHI appeared in any documents produced by VUMC in response to CIDs 1, 2, or
12
39. As a condition of receiving treatment, VUMC requires its patients to provide their
PHI to VUMC. VUMC warrants that it will safeguard this information under state and federal law
40. In the ordinary course of business, VUMC maintains records of its patients’
information such as its patients’ full names, Social Security Numbers, financial account
41. When VUMC collects this sensitive information from patients, it promises those
patients that it will use reasonable measures to safeguard the PHI from misuse.
42. In the Notice of Health Information Privacy Practices in place in 2022 (the “2022
Privacy Policy”), VUMC had informed its patients that it collects and maintains their PHI under
43. Under the Privacy Policy, VUMC warrants that it will disclose PHI to law
enforcement as follows:
18
A copy the Privacy Policy (obtained through the Wayback Machine) is attached hereto as
Exhibit A.
13
44. VUMC therefore represented to its patients that, as a matter of contract, it would
safeguard their PHI and only disclose it in limited circumstances. Relevant here, it stated that
would disclose PHI to “law enforcement and other officials” only when “authorized or required
by law” or in “response to a court order, subpoena, warrant, summons, or similar process.” A court
45. Accordingly, no patient reasonably would have expected that the catch-all term
“similar process” in the Privacy Policy would include handing over detailed, non-anonymized,
intimate, and personal medical information en masse to an un-elected state official without any
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court process, review, or notice and an opportunity to be heard beforehand. Nevertheless, in breach
46. To make matters worse, VUMC did not even tell its patients that it did this.
47. Months went by and none of the patients knew that their medical information had
been comprised. Nor did they know that VUMC had revealed their gender identity to a politically
48. In the meantime, a federal lawsuit had been filed challenging the State’s ban on
49. On June 1, 2023, a copy of the CIDs was filed on the public docket in that federal
case.
50. On June 2, 2023 (the next day – and months after the damage had already been
done) – VUMC sent the following email to some patients whose private medical information
15
51. VUMC’s email did not mention that the public filing of the CIDs prompted its
belated notification to its patients. Regardless, the email was facially inadequate and incorrect.
52. As of the date of this Complaint, VUMC has failed to explain: (1) why it failed to
protect its patients’ information from the AG; (2) why it put its own interests in cooperating with
the AG above the need to keep sensitive patient information related to out of the hands of an
otherwise hostile governmental actor; and (3) why it violated its own contractual promises to its
16
55. Plaintiffs reasonably believed, as part of the payments to VUMC for medical
treatment and services, that those payments included amounts for data security. If Plaintiffs had
known that VUMC did not conduct an investigation into the AG’s CIDs or that Plaintiffs’ private
PHI would be disclosed to the AG non-anonymized and without notice, then Plaintiffs would have
56. Since learning of VUMC’s actions, the named Plaintiffs have suffered significant
anxiety and distress, along with monetary damages. Collectively, they have been terrified for their
physical safety, have had significant anxiety and distress that has impacted their ability to work,
has caused them to increase home security measures, and drop out of activities in which they
VII. Plaintiffs and the Proposed Class Face Significant Risk of Harassment as a
Result of the AG Having Continued Access to Their PHI.
57. Plaintiffs and members of the proposed Class have suffered injury from the misuse
58. Plaintiffs and the Proposed Class guard their health information and only wish to
disclose it to trusted individuals that they know will not harass them. In Tennessee, transgender
individuals and those perceived as transgender like the Plaintiffs and the Proposed Class face
significant threats of harassment, harm, and bodily injury from being transgender or perceived as
and those perceived as transgender experience high rates of discrimination, harassment, and
violence. In the climate of hostility in Tennessee, transgender individuals and those perceived as
transgender are leaving the state in order to feel safe and secure. They are justifiably scared.19
19
'I'm definitely feeling scared': Transgender patients want answers after Tennessee's AG obtained
their medical records | WPLN News (last visited June 27, 2023).
17
59. The Rainbow Youth Project, a non-profit that advocates for LGBTQ+ young
people, received hundreds of phone calls from families in varying degrees of mental health crisis,
including suicidal ideation, caused by VUMC’s actions in turning over records.20 Their fears are
justified. According to the FBI, anti-trans crimes rose by 41% between 2019 and 2020 alone.21
60. Because of their status, transgender individuals face increased discrimination in the
workplace (including losing their jobs and being harassed), face higher risk of assault (verbal,
physical, sexual, and lethal), increased risk of suicide, mental health issues, and increased risk of
suicide.22 They also face increased difficulties locating and receiving appropriate health care –
VIII. Plaintiffs and the Class Members Have Suffered Damages and Have Otherwise
Been (and Continue to Be) Injured by VUMC’s Misconduct.
61. As a result of VUMC unlawfully disclosing Plaintiffs and the Proposed Class’ PHI
to the AG, Plaintiffs and the proposed Class have suffered (and will continue to suffer) damages,
including monetary losses, lost time, anxiety, and significant and serious emotional distress. They
also continue to face injuries going forward. They have suffered or are at an increased risk of
suffering:
20
Vanderbilt Medical Center Turned Over Trans Patient Records | Time (last visited June 27,
2023).
21
2020 FBI Hate Crimes Statistics (justice.gov) (last visited July 3, 2023).
22
USTSTNStateReport(1017).pdf (transequality.org) (last visited July 3, 2023).
23
USTSTNStateReport(1017).pdf (transequality.org) (last visited July 3, 2023).
18
d. Lost opportunity costs and lost wages associated with the time and effort expended
addressing and attempting to mitigate the actual and future consequences of the
unlawful disclosure; and
e. The continued risk to their PHI, which remains in the possession of VUMC and is
subject to further breaches so long as VUMC fails to undertake the appropriate
measures to protect the PHI in their possession.
62. Plaintiffs bring this action on behalf of themselves, and all members of the proposed
All individuals whose PHI VUMC disclosed to the AG in response to CIDs 1, 2, and 3.
The following people are excluded from the Class: (1) any judge or magistrate presiding over this
action and members of their families; (2) Defendant, Defendant’s subsidiaries, parents, successors,
predecessors, affiliated entities, and any entity in which Defendant or its parent has a controlling
interest, and their current or former officers and directors; (3) persons who properly execute and
file a timely request for exclusion from the Class; (4) persons whose claims in this matter have
been finally adjudicated on the merits or otherwise released; (5) Plaintiffs’ counsel and Defendant’s
counsel; and (6) the legal representatives, successors, and assigns of any such excluded persons.
63. The Class defined above is identifiable and ascertainable through objective criteria
65. This action is properly maintainable as a class action under Tennessee Rules of
66. Numerosity. Plaintiffs are representative of the proposed Class, consisting of over
19
67. Commonality. There are many questions of law and fact common to the claims of
Plaintiffs and the Class, and those questions predominate over any questions that may affect
individual members of the Class. Common questions for the Class include, but are not necessarily
b. Whether Defendant conducted any investigation into the propriety of CIDs 1,2, and
3;
c. Whether, in compliance with state law or its contractual promises, Defendant took
reasonable measures to ensure that anonymous patient data could be sufficient to
respond to CIDs 1, 2, and 3;
d. Whether Defendant’s delay in informing Plaintiffs and members of the Class of the
unlawful disclosures was unreasonable;
g. Whether Plaintiffs and members of the Class were injured as a proximate cause or
result of the unlawful disclosure;
h. Whether Plaintiffs and members of the Class were damaged as a proximate cause
or result of VUMC’s breach of its contract with Plaintiffs and members of the Class;
68. Typicality. Plaintiffs’ claims are typical of the claims of other members of the
Class. Plaintiffs and Class Members sustained damages from VUMC’s unlawful disclosure of PHI
to the AG under the CIDs, false statements, concealment, and unlawful release of information.
20
Plaintiffs and members of the Class sustained similar injuries and damages as a result of VUMC’s
69. Adequacy of Representation. Plaintiffs will fairly and adequately represent and
protect the interests of the Class and have retained counsel competent and experienced in complex
class actions to vigorously prosecute this action on behalf of the Class. Plaintiffs have no interests
that conflict with, or are antagonistic to those of, the Class, and Defendant has no defenses unique
to Plaintiffs.
70. Superiority of Class Action. A class action is also a fair and efficient method of
adjudicating the controversy because class proceedings are superior to all other available methods
for the fair and efficient adjudication of this controversy as joinder of all parties is impracticable.
The damages suffered by the individual members of the Class will likely be relatively small,
especially given the burden and expense of individual prosecution of the complex litigation
would be impracticable and ineffective. Even if members of the Class could sustain such individual
litigation, it would still not be preferable to a class action, because individual litigation would
increase the delay and expense to all parties due to the complex legal and factual controversies
presented in this Complaint. By contrast, a class action presents far fewer management difficulties
and provides the benefits of single adjudication, economy of scale, and comprehensive supervision
by a single court. Economies of time, effort, and expense will be fostered, and uniformity of
decisions ensured.
21
b. Individualized litigation would present a potential for inconsistent or contradictory
judgments, and increases the delay and expense to all parties and the court system;
and
c. The class action device presents far fewer management difficulties and provides the
benefits of a single adjudication, economy of scale, and comprehensive supervision
by a single court.
72. The litigation of the claims brought herein is manageable. VUMC’s uniform
conduct, the consistent provisions of the relevant laws, and the ascertainable identities of Class
members demonstrates that there would be no significant manageability problems with prosecuting
73. Adequate notice can be given to Class members directly using information
74. Predominance. Pursuant to Rule 23.02(3), the issues in this action are appropriate
for certification because such claims present only particular, common issues, the resolution of
which would advance the disposition of this matter and the parties’ interests therein. Such
particular issues include but are not limited to the questions identified above.
75. This proposed class action does not present any unique management difficulties.
76. Rule 23.02(2) Equitable Relief Class. Also, with respect to equitable relief, the
requirements of Rule 23.02(2) are also satisfied. VUMC has acted or refused to act on grounds
generally applicable to the Class thereby making appropriate final injunctive relief or
77. Plaintiffs and members of the Class incorporate the preceding and following
22
78. VUMC offered to provide goods and services to Plaintiffs and members of the Class
79. VUMC also required Plaintiffs and the members of the Class to provide VUMC
80. In turn, and through the Privacy Policy, Defendant agreed it would not disclose the
81. Plaintiffs and the members of the Class accepted VUMC’s offer by providing PHI
to VUMC in exchange for receiving Defendant’s goods and services and then by paying for and
82. Implicit in the parties’ agreement was that Defendant would provide Plaintiffs and
members of the Class with prompt and adequate notice of any and all unauthorized access and/or
83. As described above, VUMC’s privacy policies did not clearly or adequately notify
patients that VUMC would ever turn over their medical information and PHI without a court
process. The Policy indicated that records would only be turned over with Court involvement.
84. Plaintiffs and the members of the Class would not have entrusted their PHI to
85. Defendant materially breached the contract(s) it entered with Plaintiffs and
members of the Class by failing to safeguard such information and failing to notify them promptly
of the unlawful disclosure of their PHI. VUMC further breached the contracts with Plaintiffs and
a. Failing to properly safeguard and protect Plaintiffs and members of the Class’s PHI;
23
b. Failing to investigate whether the AG sought Plaintiffs and the Class’s PHI for a
legitimate law enforcement need and whether de-identified information could
reasonably be used;
c. Failing to investigate whether the AG’s request for PHI was relevant and material
and failing to limit the scope of any PHI delivered to the AG; and
d. Failing to timely inform Plaintiffs and members of the Class that the AG sought
their PHI.
86. The damages sustained by Plaintiffs and members of the Class as described above
were the direct and proximate result of VUMC’s material breaches of its agreement(s).
87. Plaintiffs and members of the Class have performed as required under the relevant
88. The covenant of good faith and fair dealing is an element of every contract. All such
contracts impose upon each party a duty of good faith and fair dealing. The parties must act with
honesty in fact in the conduct or transactions concerned. Good faith and fair dealing, in connection
with executing contracts and discharging performance and other duties according to their terms,
means preserving the spirit—not merely the letter—of the bargain. Put differently, the parties to a
contract are mutually obligated to comply with the substance of their contract in addition to its
form.
89. Subterfuge and evasion violate the obligation of good faith in performance even
when an actor believes their conduct to be justified. Bad faith may be overt or may consist of
90. Additionally, for the reasons stated above, Defendant violated its 2022 Privacy
Policy by disclosing non-anonymized PHI to the AG in response to the CIDs. VUMC also violated
that policy any subsequent policy by failing to notify affected patients until months after it had
24
91. Plaintiffs and Class members fully performed their obligations under their contract
with VUMC. VUMC did not. Absent their contracts with VUMC, Plaintiffs and Class members
would not have provided their confidential PHI to VUMC. Instead, they would have retained the
opportunity to control their PHI for uses other than medical treatment, billing, and benefits from
VUMC.
92. VUMC failed to advise Plaintiffs and members of the Class of the unlawful
disclosure promptly and sufficiently. VUMC also failed to give Plaintiffs and Class Members
notice and a meaningful opportunity to object to the disclosure of their non-anonymized PHI
93. In these and other ways, VUMC violated its duty of good faith and fair dealing.
94. As a matter of contract, Plaintiffs and members of the Class have sustained damages
as a result of Defendant’s breaches of its agreement, including breaches thereof through violations
95. Plaintiffs and members of the Class incorporate the preceding and following
96. VUMC had a duty to protect the PHI of its current and former patients.
97. VUMC breached that duty by providing PHI to the AG in response to the CIDs.
98. As a result of Defendant’s conduct, Plaintiffs and members of the Class suffered
actual damages including increase in emotional distress, anguish, and higher costs of medical care
going forward. Plaintiffs and Class Members will also require additional mental health treatment
that they would not otherwise require but for VUMC’s conduct.
25
99. Plaintiffs and Class Members also require a declaration and other forms of forward-
looking relief. This includes these forms of relief and the other requested in the Prayer for Relief:
b. A declaration that that VUMC’s current Privacy Policy fails adequately to inform
patients of their rights and the terms under which PHI can be disclosed; and
c. An injunction against VUMC from disclosing similar PHI in the future without (a)
adequate due diligence; (b) a determination that the nature of the scope of the
document request is both lawful and actually tailored to the stated purpose of
investigation; and (c) anonymizing the data consistent with the law and patients’
privacy rights.
100. Plaintiffs and members of the Class incorporate the preceding and following
101. Under T.C.A. § 1-3-121, “Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, a cause of
action shall exist under this chapter for any affected person who seeks declaratory or injunctive
relief in any action brought regarding the legality or constitutionality of a governmental action. A
cause of action shall not exist under this chapter to seek damages.”
102. With respect to this claim, Plaintiffs and the Class seek declaratory and injunctive
103. This is an action regarding the legality of governmental actions taken by the AG as
104. Plaintiffs and Class Members are people who were affected by those actions.
105. For these reasons, Plaintiffs and the Class respectfully seek all remedies available
26
FOURTH CAUSE OF ACTION
Claim Under Patient’s Privacy Protection Act, T.C.A. § 68-11-1501
(On Behalf of Plaintiffs and the Class)
106. Plaintiffs and members of the Class incorporate the preceding and following
107. T.C.A. § 68-11-1501 et seq. is the Tennessee Patient’s Privacy Protection Act (the
“TPPPA”).
108. Under the TPPPA, “[e]very patient entering or receiving care at a health care facility
licensed by the board for licensing health care facilities has the expectation of and right to privacy
109. For the reasons stated elsewhere in this pleading, VUMC violated that statutory
right by divulging the names, addresses, and other identifying information of the individuals
subject to CIDs 1, 2, and 3, without meeting any statutory exceptions. VUMC therefore violated
110. Plaintiffs and the Class therefore seek all available remedies.
111. Plaintiffs and members of the Class incorporate the preceding and following
112. T.C.A. § 47-18-101 et seq. is the Tennessee Consumer Protection Act (“TCPA”).
The act prohibits unfair and deceptive practices affecting the conduct of any trade or commerce.
113. The conduct described above resulted in VUMC violating the TCPA, and
27
sponsorship approval, status, affiliation or connection that such person does not
have;
114. Plaintiffs and the Class therefore seek all remedies available under the TCPA.
115. Plaintiffs and members of the Class incorporate the preceding and following
116. Through the actions described in this pleading, VUMC has intentionally intruded
upon the solicitude, seclusion, or private affairs or concerns of Plaintiffs and members of the Class,
117. Plaintiffs and the Class Members manifested an expectation of privacy in their
118. As set forth herein, Plaintiffs and Class Members have suffered injuries from
VUMC’s misconduct, including but limited to VUMC’s release of their information to the AG.
119. Plaintiffs and Class Members therefore seek all available remedies under this cause
of action.
120. Plaintiffs and members of the Class incorporate the preceding and following
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121. For the reasons stated herein, VUMC had a state or contractual duty to Plaintiffs
and Class Members to safeguard their medical records and PHI, breached that duty by disclosing
it and declining to be forthcoming about it, and was the cause in fact and proximate cause of
emotional injuries to Plaintiffs and Class Members. These injuries were foreseeable.
122. Plaintiffs and Class Members therefore seek all available remedies under this cause
of action.
123. The claims advanced by Plaintiffs and in good faith, are not frivolous, and are filed
for the express purposes of extending, modifying, or reversing existing precedent, law, or
regulation, and for the express purpose of the establishing the meaning, lawfulness, or
impression as defined in T.C.A. § 20-12-119. First, to the best of Plaintiffs’ knowledge, VUMC’s
actions and the AG’s CIDs are unprecedented under Tennessee law. They represent an incursion
of patient privacy for which Plaintiffs have not identified any Tennessee precedent. The case
therefore presents issues of first impression concerning the validity of Plaintiffs’ claims. Second,
to the extent that VUMC asserts immunity from suit under the Tennessee Patient Privacy Act or
HIPAA to defend its conduct, Plaintiffs bring this lawsuit to reverse, modify, or extend any
WHEREFORE, Plaintiffs, on behalf of themselves and all others similarly situated, request
A. An Order certifying this action as a class action and appointing Plaintiffs as Class
representative and the undersigned as Class counsel;
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B. A mandatory injunction directing VUMC to adequately safeguard the PHI of
Plaintiffs and the Class by implementing improved security procedures and
measures;
F. For the individual TCPA claim, treble damages and punitive damages as allowed
by law;
H. An award of pre- and post-judgment interest, costs, attorneys’ fees, expenses, and
interest as permitted by law;
I. Granting the Plaintiffs and the Class leave to amend this complaint to conform to
the evidence produced at trial; and
J. Such other and further relief as this court may deem just and proper.
Plaintiffs hereby demand a trial by jury on all issues so triable except for the issues of
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Dated: July 24, 2023 Respectfully submitted,
Abby Rubenfeld
Rubenfeld Law Office, PC
202 South Eleventh Street
Nashville, TN 37206
Ph: 615-386-9077
arubenfeld@rubenfeldlaw.com
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