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Saturday, April 5, 2014

Charging for Medical Records is NOT the Right Thing to DO

Rare disease moms have to stick together. There aren't many people in the world who really understand our lives. So, when you make things difficult for one of us, we rally around each other to help.

Recently, another rare disease mom tried to get her 6 year old's records from the hospital and doctors where she gets seen. Shockingly, she got a $1106 bill! Her daughter was seen by the hospital and doctors, there were fees charged and paid for the services, and now that she wants to understand what happened better and wants to have a record of it for future use, she is charged an extra ONE THOUSAND dollars. 

Another rare disease mom also is struggling with the same hospital for a $600 bill. I was also charged hundreds of dollars to get Morgan's records from this SAME hospital.

Since I work at CareSync, we usually are able to help people with these problems. We help organize their records and give them tools to not only store them but to share them in meaningful ways with family and other doctors. However, every once in a while, we run across situations where healthcare tradition and bureaucracy show the true craziness in healthcare.

Each state can make up their own rules for medical record fees, and HIPAA requires that the patient be given access within 30 days. However, HIPAA allows state rules on the fees. I would argue that charging someone $500, $600, and especially $1106 for their medical record is not really making the records accessible to the patient.

Here is a link to many state fees http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1560890/
Here is something specific to Illinois http://www.healthinfolaw.org/state-law/735-ilcs-58-2001
Here is a survey by AMIA of several hospitals on what they charge http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1560890/

CareSync has tried to help in these cases, and our Chief Medical Officer even requested the records and even called the hospital himself multiple times to try to get some reasonable outcome. The lowest they would go to was nearly $600 and they will continue to charge for each single visit afterward for an approximate $28 per visit (includes a "handling fee"). 

What other industry do you not get some record of what happened? When my air conditioner broke this year, I got a written account of what happened. When my car needed work, I got a written account of what was needed and what was completed. Every month, I get a phone bill that gives me a record of what calls were made.

I posted this on twitter this morning, and there were quite a few great tweets in support of this. I understand that it is work on the part of the hospital or doctor, but isn't that work part of the fee that is charged the patent and her insurance?







See tweets as a PDF
As you can see, there were quite a few different people posting similar thoughts here. So, what can we do? Any other ideas? How do we solve this for all patients? It is so important for patients to have access to their information. 

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