Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. take your own flash drive. The medical record belongs to you. They can only charge for actual costs (copying, staff x, discs), but this is not enforced.
Medical providers hate it when patients ask for copies of records as they know it can end up in evidence.
Um, patients "own" their medical records in only two states. http://www.healthinfolaw.org/comparative-analysis/who-owns-medical-records-50-state-comparison
Anonymous wrote:The part of OP's story I find incredulous is that the records were transferred from another doctor first. Presumably the new doctor paid for the record from the original doctor... But still, I have no business relationship with you, but you bought my info from someone else? Now I have to pay to get my records?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. take your own flash drive. The medical record belongs to you. They can only charge for actual costs (copying, staff x, discs), but this is not enforced.
Medical providers hate it when patients ask for copies of records as they know it can end up in evidence.
Um, patients "own" their medical records in only two states. http://www.healthinfolaw.org/comparative-analysis/who-owns-medical-records-50-state-comparison
Anonymous wrote:No. take your own flash drive. The medical record belongs to you. They can only charge for actual costs (copying, staff x, discs), but this is not enforced.
Medical providers hate it when patients ask for copies of records as they know it can end up in evidence.
Anonymous wrote:There have been some lawsuits around this practice. It's ok to charge under HIPAA, however it's not cool for them to charge excessively.
http://m.healthcareitnews.com/news/hospitals-slapped-lawsuit-medical-records-overcharging