Legal FAQs



How Do I Request Medical Records?

PDF Print

Deli.cio.us    Digg    reddit    Facebook    StumbleUpon    Newsvine

Who May Request Medical Records and Who Must Share Them?

You must be the patient, or the parent or guardian of the patient for whom you seek records. Caregivers may be able to access records if the patient has provided written permission to the provider.  

Providers are required to keep most adult medical records for six years or more, although this varies by the state where the records are stored. In most states, children's records must be kept for three to 10 years beyond age 18 or 21. If you seek older records, contact the provider to see if they are available.

Providers are required to share any notes or records they have created themselves, or any test results for which they have copies. They are also required to share any information provided to them about you by another doctor if that information was used for the diagnosis and/or treatment being discussed with you.

Diagnostic lab test records, for such tests as blood tests, CT scans, x-rays, mammograms or others, should be requested from the doctor who ordered them, or your primary care physician. In most states, the lab will not provide them to you directly.

If you seek hospital records or records from any other medical facility, you'll want to request them directly from that facility.



How Do I Request My Medical Records?

Most practices and facilities ask you to fill out a form to request your records. Call the provider's office and request a copy of the form. They should be able to deliver it to you by fax, e-mail, or snail mail or you may pick it up from the doctor's office.

If the doctor's office doesn't have a specific form, you may write a letter to make your request. Include this information:

  • your name, including your maiden name (if applicable)
  • Social Security number
  • date of birth
  • address and phone number
  • e-mail address
  • record(s) being requested
  • date(s) of service (months and years under the doctor's care)
  • signature
  • delivery option (pick up, fax, e-mail, etc.)

When a doctor's practice closes or is sold, or upon the death of a provider with no successor in the practice, it may be difficult to determine how to make a request. By law, the acquiring practice or the provider's estate must keep records for 10 years. To track the location of these records, contact your local medical society (try the phone book), a hospital where the provider had admitting privileges, the state medical society or the state department of health. One or more of those organizations should know where the records are being stored and who you'll need to contact to get copies.



Do I have to pay for my records?

Many patients get upset at the fact that they have to pay for copies of their medical records. They believe they have already paid for the records when the provider was paid for her services. However, this charge is actually intended to cover the cost of someone's time to retrieve the records, make copies and supply postage, if necessary.

Each state has its own laws about how much can be charged, usually an amount per page. In some states, the charge is required only to be "reasonable." Here is a list of states and their allowable charges. Or ask the provider's office what they charge for the service.

If you can't afford to pay for the records, you cannot be refused access. In most states, you are required to state in your own handwriting that you cannot afford to pay for them. Give that statement to your provider, at which point the provider will usually give them to you at no cost.

One way to bypass the cost may be to request your records as they are developed. Make it a habit to request copies as you get ready to leave the provider's office. Since the records have not yet been stored, you may not be charged anything for the copies. This policy will vary by practice and facility.

How long will this take?

State laws regulate how quickly those records must be supplied to a patient. In some states, you'll be given access to review them in the doctor's office immediately but may have to wait from 10 to 60 days to obtain your own copies. Other states require access within 30 days. Georgetown University provides access to the medical records regulations healthcare providers must adhere to in all 50 states. Those time frames may sometimes be extended if circumstances warrant.

 

 

What Is The Statute of Limitations?

PDF Print

Deli.cio.us    Digg    reddit    Facebook    StumbleUpon    Newsvine

IS YOUR CASE TIME-BARRED?

Information on the “Statute of Limitations”

 

What is the “Statute of Limitations”?
There is a rule of law known as the statute of limitations, whereby, any person who has been injured through an accident or by any product and who wishes to file a lawsuit for recovery of damages, needs to do so within a particular time limit. If the lawsuit is not filed within the statute of limitations, then any legal right of the injured party will be lost forever and he or she will no longer have the option to sue for recovery of any money or other compensation.

In the United States there is no set statute of limitations for the entire country but each state has its own statute of limitations for product liability and personal injury claims.
 

* Alabama 2 years
* Arkansas 2 years
* Arizona 2 years
* Arkansas 2 years
* California 2 years
* Colorado 2 years
* Connecticut 2 years
* Delaware 2 years
* District of Columbia (D.C.) 3 years
* Florida 4 years
* Georgia 2 years
* Hawaii 2 years
* Idaho 2 years
* Illinois 2 years
* Indiana 2 years
* Iowa 2 years
* Kansas 2 years
* Kentucky 1 year
* Louisiana 1 year
* Maine 6 years
* Maryland 3 years
* Massachusetts 3 years
* Michigan 3 years
* Minnesota 2 years
* Mississippi 3 years
* Missouri 5 years
* Montana 3 years
* Nebraska 4 years
* Nevada 2 years
* New Hampshire 3 years
* New Jersey 2 years
* New Mexico 3 years
* New York 3 years
* North Carolina 3 years
* North Dakota 6 years
* Ohio 2 years
* Oklahoma 2 years
* Oregon 2 years
* Pennsylvania 2 years
* Rhode Island 3 years
* South Carolina 3 years
* South Dakota 3 years
* Tennessee 1 year
* Texas 2 years
* Utah 4 years
* Vermont 3 years
* Virginia 2 years
* Washington 3 years
* West Virginia 2 years
* Wisconsin 3 years
* Wyoming 4 years

 

When does the clock begin to run on my claim under the “statute of limitations”?

  • A: It depends. States decide on when the time limits begin to run for injuries. The 2 most common start-times are either WHEN THE INJURY OCCURRED or WHEN THE INJURY WAS DISCOVERED. The choice varies from state to state.

When the Injury Occurred

In some states, the statute of limitations begins to run when the injury actually occurs. This can have harsh consequences if the injured person doesn’t discover the injury until after the statute of limitations has already expired.

When the Injury is Discovered

In many states, the statute of limitations begins to run only when the injured person discovers (or should have discovered) the injury. For example, let’s say you were injured by inhaling fumes from a defective chemical product and you discovered your injury years later when your doctor diagnosed you with lung damage. In a state with an injury-discovery rule, the time limit on your defective product claim would begin to run on the date of your lung damage diagnosis (that is, when you discovered your injury), not when you inhaled the noxious fumes (in other words, when the injury actually occurred).

In these states the statute of limitation can begin to run when the injured person should have discovered the injury. The "should have discovered" part of this rule means that the deadline may start to run even though you do not actually know you have been injured. For example, in the lung injury hypothetical mentioned above, let's say you develop a terrible cough but delay going to a doctor for several months. A court might decide that the statute of limitations started to run when you developed the cough, as opposed to when you finally went to the doctor, because you should have discovered your injury when you first developed the serious cough.

These issues are likely to arise only if your claim is on the edge of being timely, so the sooner you file your claim, the better.

 


© 2008 leflaw.com design by tracy feldman