Photo of Jeff Kiburtz

Jeff Kiburtz

Jeff Kiburtz is a litigator with nearly 20 years of experience representing commercial policyholders in complex insurance coverage matters of nearly all types. He has helped clients recover more than $1 billion from insurance companies. His practice encompasses a wide range of insurance and indemnification issues involving sports and entertainment, construction, environmental litigation, sexual abuse, business interruption losses, directors and officers, cyber attacks, healthcare, and product liability, among others. He publishes and speaks frequently on insurance issues.

Fluent in Spanish, Jeff also maintains an active pro bono practice, focusing on the representation of monolingual Spanish speakers.

Digital Health

In this bonus edition of our checkup series, Covington’s global cross-practice Digital Health team considers some additional key questions about product liability and insurance coverage that companies across the life sciences and technology sectors should be asking as they seek to fit together the regulatory and commercial pieces of the complex digital health puzzle.

1. What are the key questions when crafting warnings and disclosures?

If your product is regulated, your warnings and disclosures will need to comply with any relevant regulations. In the case of a product not regulated by the FDA or equivalent regulatory body, first consider how your warnings and disclosures will be incorporated into the use of the product.

Some disclosures, like an explanation of the data source used by software, may fit best in terms and conditions that a user sees before using the product. Key warnings, however, may be more appropriately placed as part of the user experience.

Example: A warning that patients should consult their doctors if necessary may need to be placed in proximity to specific medical content.

Best Practice: Consider your intended audience: are you writing warnings for doctors, patients, or institutions? The appropriate types of disclosures will vary across populations. Patient-directed warnings may also need to be written in simplified language.

Best Practice: Consider whether it is appropriate for your product to have users to accept or otherwise be required to agree to the warnings and disclosures.

Continue Reading Digital Health Checkup (Bonus): Product Liability and Insurance Coverage