Yep exactly this. But since there are barely any primary care doctors anymore good luck finding a new one OP. |
We really can't respond to this appropriately unless you disclose what the diagnosis is/isn't. That you keep refusing to add this piece of information is suspicious. |
IT DOES NOT MATTER. Wow you have a major league psychiatric problem also. Probably OCD. |
Not PP. I am a different PP and think the OP needs to pick her battles and that none of what she has said here makes it clear that this is a critical one. To give a sense of what I consider to cross that threshold and how insane a lift it was to do something about it, here is one I fought: at my 6-week post-delivery OB visit, a record was inserted into my file saying that I had taken a urine drug screen and that it was negative for everything except tobacco. I had not taken a urine drug screen, or peed at all, at that appointment. Have never smoked a cigarette (or anything else). I considered a clearly erroneous test result that could be involved in something like a custody dispute to be a big enough problem to argue. It took six months to get the lab result removed, even though the dr's office immediately conceded that it was not mine and belonged to a different patient who was seen that day. An erroneous reference to a diagnosis ostensibly from another dr, I wouldn't bother with much. In fact, it's also happened to me--a doc saw an Rx medication that is used for multiple conditions and assumed it was for Condition A, and wrote a diagnosis of Condition A on a cover sheet on my chart where all the diagnoses go (this was before electronic medical records). I did not have Condition A, but Condition Z, for which the medication is also used. Sanity has value and preserving it has to be a priority in interactions with the health care system. |
| Quit your doctor. Do not forward your old file with the new doctor. Poof! The old notes are gone. |
Doctors don’t need your consent to share medical records with other doctors providing care. Don’t get me wrong- the OP sounds nuts- but it is reasonable to expect doctors to maintain accurate medical records and correct them when they make mistakes. |
An incorrect diagnosis on her file will follow her. Depending on her insurance, she may have to seek a new provider in the same healthcare system as the old doctor so the notes will remain in her file because they are connected. Stating a patient has had unhealthy eating habits/lack of exercise when they have a heart condition is something read by insurance providers and other doctors. It could actually cause problems for the patient in the future. She doesn't sound "nuts." She sounds like she wants her health record to be free of mistakes which isn't "nuts." |
No perhaps you should read up on obamas online medical records crap. This follows you FOREVER. WHERE EVER YOU GO. |
Doesn't exactly work though. |
Cause problems in the future? Please describe what sort of problems could emerge. |
It actually is kind of nuts. That is what those of us with a lot of experience looking at our medical records are here saying. They always contain errors and doctors know this. Insisting that the errors be corrected in situations where there is not an obvious negative consequence that everyone can easily anticipate distinguishes the patient doing the insisting. Choosing to be distinguished that way is...a choice. It has costs. |
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| Next time you go in tell her you’d like her to document that you’ve asked for the following corrections/amendments to he noted about your history. If they refuse, insist they document their refusal not note the corrections in your record. |
This will go GREAT |
Yes it does I guess you have never logged onto your account online. They have medication listed from 15 plus years ago on there. All the doctors you have seen. What pharmacy you went to and what you got. Everything is there. |