Company: WW
Filing Date: 2025-02-28
Form Type: 10-K
Source: 0000950170-25-029511
Chunk: 84

Company: WW INTERNATIONAL, INC.
Filing Date: 2025-02-28
Form: 10-K
Item: Item 1
Chunk 84
---
”), we engaged in discussions with the FTC regarding online privacy obligations associated with that program. In February 2022, the FTC filed a complaint and proposed settlement order to resolve allegations that Kurbo violated the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act. We entered into a consent order with the FTC in March 2022 settling all contested issues raised in the complaint filed against us, and determined in the second quarter of fiscal 2022 to exit the Kurbo business in the third quarter of fiscal 2022 as part of our strategic plan.

In addition, we, our PCs, and Affiliated Professionals are subject to other laws and regulations in the United States and internationally, as applicable. For example, the practice of medicine is subject to various federal, state, and local certification and licensing laws, regulations, and approvals, which relate to topics including the adequacy of medical care, the practice of medicine (including the provision of remote care), personnel, operating policies and procedures, and the prerequisites for the prescription of medication. Failure to comply with these or other laws and regulations or changes in laws, regulations, policies, and related interpretations and enforcement practices could give rise to civil or criminal penalties, affect our cost of doing business, alter the landscape in which we do business, and require operational changes. Our contractual relationships with our PCs and Affiliated Professionals are also subject to various state laws that prohibit fee splitting, the sharing of professional services income with nonprofessional or business interests, and the corporate practice of medicine (“CPOM”) and laws, regulations, and administrative interpretations intended to prevent unlicensed persons from interfering with or influencing the physician’s professional judgment. CPOM and fee splitting laws vary from state to state and are subject to interpretation and enforcement by state regulators, and the failure to comply could lead to adverse judicial or administrative actions against us, our PCs or Affiliated Professionals, civil or criminal penalties, cease-and-desist orders, loss of healthcare provider licenses, changes to contractual arrangements, and other materially adverse consequences. A determination of liability under, or noncompliance with, broadly applicable fraud and abuse laws and regulations, such as state healthcare fraud and abuse laws that apply to items or services reimbursed by any third-party payor, including funds paid out of pocket by patients, may also subject us, our PCs, or our Affiliated Professionals to fines, penalties, other adverse consequences, and restrictions on our business, our PCs or Affiliated Providers. The scope of these laws and interpretations of them vary by jurisdiction and are enforced by courts and governmental and regulatory authorities, each