Insurance Europe: Consumer Credit Directive: Including right to be forgotten for persons with prior diagnosis would be bad for consumers

14 September 2022

To avoid unforeseen negative consequences for consumers, the implementation of any RTBF at EU level should be via a flexible code of conduct.

A new Insurance Europe paper setting out the sector’s key messages on the ongoing review of the Consumer Credit Directive (CCD) outlines why the introduction of a right to be forgotten for persons with a prior diagnosis of certain communicable and non-communicable diseases, including cancer, would have significant negative impacts on consumers and their insurers.

This follows the European Parliament’s amendments to the CCD legislative proposal that would require member states to draw up a list of communicable and non-communicable diseases in order to introduce a 10-year right to be forgotten (RTBF) for adults (five years if diagnosed before the age of 18). The RTBF would mean they would not be required to disclose a prior diagnosis of any disease on that list to an insurer.

Were this to be adopted in the final CCD, insurers foresee:

To avoid unforeseen negative consequences for consumers, the implementation of any RTBF at EU level should be via a flexible code of conduct. This should be agreed to by all stakeholders, put scientific, medical and statistical data at its centre, and be able to be smoothly adapted to scientific developments. Insurance Europe, therefore, advises against a rigid mechanism embedded in EU legislation that is hard to adapt.

Insurance Europe also strongly welcomes the recent assurance given by EU Commissioner Mairead McGuinness that the European Commission will gather more evidence and encourage dialogue between national authorities, patients and the financial sector during the drafting of the EU code of conduct on fair access by cancer survivors to financial services.

Paper

Insurance Europe


© InsuranceEurope