Half Of Healthcare Organizations Charge Patients For Copies Of Records
Patient engagement in healthcare is increasingly becoming a priority for organizations, but for patients whose providers don't offer patient portals, most still have to request copies of their paper and electronic medical records. According to an article in Perspectives in Health Information Management discussing survey results, 52.6 percent of healthcare organizations charge patients for electronic copies of their medical records and 64.7 percent charge them for paper copies.
Charges for electronic copies generally were a flat fee by device or a per-page fee, while charges for paper copies typically were by page. The majority of healthcare organizations — 65 percent — said they charge less than $1 per page.
The author of the perspective — Kim Murphy-Abdouch, clinical assistant professor and clinical coordinator in the health information management department at Texas State University in San Marcos — introduces the legal question regarding this practice. CMS, she writes, suggests charging patients for access to their information is "inappropriate" under meaningful use criteria, and HIPAA provides patients the right to see and obtain copies of their records. HIPAA does allow providers to charge a "reasonable cost-based" fee for providing patients copies, but any fee can only include labor and supply costs of copying records and necessary postage...
- Tags:
- Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS)
- electronic medical records (EMRs)
- Health Information Management (HIM)
- Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA)
- Kim Murphy-Abdouch
- Meaningful Use (MU)
- patient engagement
- Perspectives in Health Information Management
- Texas State University (TSU)
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