Letting patients read the doctor's notes
The New York Times, October 5, 2012
Since 1996, when Congress passed the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, or Hipaa, patients have had the right to read and even amend their own records.In fact, few patients have ever consulted their own records. Many physicians also remained hesitant to share their notes, part of the patient’s records, because of concerns that such openness might have harmful effects on both their patients’ well-being and their own practices. Some worried that mention of minor abnormalities in laboratory values—for example, a slightly elevated prostate specific antigen or white blood cell count—could cause patients to worry unduly about some dread disease. Those fears, it now turns out, were largely unfounded.
Most Viewed
Most Emailed
- Healthcare Leaders Seek Strategic Sweet Spot
- 3 Reasons Wellness Programs Fail
- CMS Issues Health Insurance Exchange Proposed Rules
- Patients Shoulder Nearly 25% of Medical Bills
- ACOs Widespread, Yet Challenged
- MGMA: Physician Compensation Increasingly Based on Quality Measures
- HFMA: Patient Financial Interaction Guidelines Sharpened
- 6 CNO-to-CEO Strategies
- Evidence-Based Practice and Nursing Research: Avoiding Confusion
- Data Collaborative Taps Predictive Analytics to Coordinate Care
