Comments

What’s On Their Minds: What is to be Retained in a Patient’s Medical Record and Who Decides? Gene’a Griffith, Executrix for the Estate of Howard E. Griffith, Deceased v. Aultman Hospital. — 2 Comments

  1. Great review. I have to agree with the Student’s take on this one (being very in tune to the propensity to side with medical providers!) that they will not allow Baldwin’s decision to stand (rightly) but will find a way to make this a one-off unique case with very little applicability that Plaintiff’s lawyers can use, and which continues to “hide the ball” from patients.

    Thank you as always for your continued posts!

  2. Call me cynical, but I suspect the real tension here exists not over technological feasibility but rather with regard to what hospitals do not want to have to disclose to patients and their attorneys. It seemed from my reading that the “feasibility” argument was simply part of a “parade of horribles” seeking to persuade the court not to dictate to the hospital what had to be maintained, and disclosed. Wasn’t the actual information sought still in existence and maintained by the hospital, and simply designated by the hospital “not part of the patient chart”? That does not call into question “feasibility”; it deals strictly with the definition of what is a “medical record”, and who has the discretion to define that. We presently conduct audit trails of hospital charts, in order to determine if there have been after-the-fact, self-serving alterations by medical providers (aka, “doctored records”). If the hospital’s position is upheld in this case, hospitals most certainly will try to take the position that digital evidence of redactions, alterations, “corrections”, etc. are “not part of the patient’s hospital medical chart”, and they should not be burdened with maintaining and/or disclosing digital information with regard to such.