By Stuart E. Hoffman, DC, FICA
ChiroSecure President
Your patients’ clinical records are the core of your chiropractic practice.
How they are arranged, secured and accessed has become a matter of increasing
regulatory focus, and every DC must pay close attention to record keeping,
both in terms of recording all relevant clinical data on each patient on a
timely and comprehensive basis, as well as on how they are physically (or
electronically) maintained and secured. You should be fully familiar with the
federal HIPAA (Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996)
confidentiality requirements and have a records security and access plan in
place, with which all of your associates and employees are familiar and
closely follow. You should know what your state, provincial or national
regulatory body expects in terms of record content. You should also know how
and who can access patient records and how to protect yourself and your
practice against mistakes such as releasing the only copy of a file, allowing
improper access, or unauthorized changes or additions to a patient file.
Common sense and a thorough knowledge of the official rules in your
jurisdiction are your best protections.
The question of ownership of patient records is clear and absolute. The doctor
owns the records. The patient, however, also has rights to the information in
those records. Within the rules as established by your state, province or
national regulatory bodies, you must provide patients copies of their records
when requested in writing. You must always obtain a signed release from the
patient that contains their original signature. Agents of the patient,
including attorneys, guardians and other representatives can also request such
records on a patient’s behalf, but always get the signed authorization to
release. There should never be any exceptions to this rule, except when a
court order or subpoena is involved.
You do have the opportunity to charge for the expense of making copies of
those records, and every US state has a schedule that establishes and/or
limits such charges. It is interesting to note that even in states where the
rules regarding patients’ rights to their own health care records might be
vague or limited, there exists a strict and specific schedule for charging for
copies. You should always maintain a full record of who has received copies or
summaries of patient records and any such information should always be
consistent down to the smallest detail with what is in your master file.
Practitioners need to be aware of and be alert to potential problems and
issues when a patient wants a copy of their personal records. In recent years,
patients have become increasingly interested in and demanding of access to the
exact details of what is in their personal files. This represents a relatively
new series of challenges and issues since a patient’s absolute right to access
their personal records, and obtain copies, has not always been on the statute
books. In fact, as recently as 1995, only 28 states had rules that guaranteed
patients access to their own records. Today, nearly every state seeks to
provide patients with both access as well as confidentiality through statutes
and regulations, for their personal health care records.
Doctors should develop a written release of records policy and have it
immediately available to any patient that asks about getting copies of their
personal files. Doctors should also have a written copy of the formal laws and
rules relating to patients rights on file and readily available, especially
those portions of the formal rules that limit access if this is the case in
your jurisdiction, and those portions of the rules that deal with charges for
such copies. It is hard for any patient to argue with the law.
Doctors should also recognize that requests for records often represent a
goodwill frontier, and a friendly, prompt and complete response is almost
always in the best interests of the practice. Avoiding long delays in
responding to all requests for records is another important consideration.
This is easier to do if you keep those records current and complete.
The motives of patients for accessing their records are diverse, and range
from the most innocent and reasonable to questionable or even sinister. In
some instances, patients are concerned that records of illness, injury or
chronic conditions might disqualify them from accessing life or health
insurance in the future, limit their ability to compete for some kinds of
employment, or impact a disability finding. There are emerging patterns of
patient behavior where some patients even want to change what you put in their
files, deleting vital data, or amending your findings to present an altogether
different conclusion from what you originally found. This most definitely
falls into the category of “must not do.”
A patient’s desire or demand, to change their records raises very serious
questions from both professional responsibility and ethical perspectives. As
well, the malpractice implications of such changes can be profound. Correcting
a fact, such as date of birth or even accurately reflecting a patient’s height
or weight is one thing. Changing or deleting a clinical finding, is an
entirely different issue and should be avoided at all times. Again, don’t do
it.
The reality of chiropractic practice today is that a request for records by a
patient is a signal to which you must pay attention. What exactly it is a
signal of needs to be explored, carefully and diplomatically, but quickly. It
is in your best interests to find out why the request is being made and to
move swiftly to address any issue, complaint or concern that your
communication with the patient reveals. In many instances, records are
requested because a patient is re-locating. Some may simply have decided to
change providers. Often, other health care professionals have asked for more
information on their chiropractic care, or patients are just curious as to
what you are saying about their status, often based on cost concerns. Again,
there are more problematic motives, and here is where having a policy in
place, sound procedures for security and a good procedure and commitment to
keep records complete and up to date, as well as well-arrayed, tends to pay
off.
One red flag that requires extra special care is a situation where a patient,
especially after only one or two visits, requests their files and there is an
unpaid balance outstanding. Do you have to release records for care that has
not been paid for? In some states you do not, but in most, you do. Find out
what the exact situation is in your jurisdiction, and get it in writing. Calls
to your chiropractic regulatory board, your state association and your
malpractice carrier are all good ideas, and be sure to record the advice you
have been given.
Requests for personal records are likely to take on a new dimension of concern
in the months and years ahead. As health care costs continue to rise, as more
and more information about health, chiropractic, malpractice and consumer
rights becomes available on the Internet, more organizations, like Medicare
and some private networks already do, encourage beneficiaries to scrutinize
all bills and procedures, and report any discrepancies to fraud and abuse
units. Here, even honest mistakes can have unfortunate consequences.
The moral of the story, as it always is in recordkeeping, is to maintain
timely, accurate, secure files on every patient, and above all, know what the
precise rules are. It may not be the most fun thing you do in your practice,
but it will reward you in peace of mind every time you are questioned about
your files.
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory's Ethical, Legal and Social
Issues in Science (ELSI) Project,
http://www.lbl.gov/Education/ELSI/ELSI.html.