AN ACT CONCERNING PATIENT ACCESS TO MEDICAL RECORDS.
Strengthens patients' right to access their medical records - timely, affordable copies (electronic when possible), with clear formats, fees, and privacy safeguards.
Strengthens patients' right to access their medical records - timely, affordable copies (electronic when possible), with clear formats, fees, and privacy safeguards.
Bill Number: HB 5337
Title: AN ACT CONCERNING PATIENT ACCESS TO MEDICAL RECORDS
Introduced: March 14, 2025
Current Status: Referred to Joint Committee on Public Health; committee substitute reported favorably and sent to Calendars (see timeline below)
Subject: Medical records; patient access
Companion Bill: SB 16
Note: the full bill text is not included here. The summary below states the bill’s purpose and likely scope based on the title and usual legislative practice; readers should consult the enacted bill text or the committee substitute for precise statutory language, deadlines, fees, and enforcement mechanisms.
The bill is intended to strengthen or clarify patients’ legal rights to access their medical records. Typical objectives of such legislation are to ensure timely, affordable, and usable access to health information (including electronic copies), to align state rules with federal HIPAA patient access requirements, and to reduce administrative obstacles that impede patient control of their health data.
Because the bill text is not provided, these reflect provisions commonly addressed in “patient access to medical records” bills. Confirm specifics in the actual bill:
- Right of patients (or authorized representatives) to inspect and obtain copies of medical records, including imaging and lab results.
- Timeframe for furnishing records (commonly a statutory deadline such as 7–30 calendar days from request).
- Requirement to provide records in the patient’s requested format when practicable (electronic files/secure download, patient portal, paper copies).
- Limits or caps on fees for copies (per-page fees or a reasonable, cost-based charge; some bills provide for free electronic copies).
- Procedures for requesting amendments/corrections to records and for documenting disputes.
- Rules for third‑party access (e.g., patient-authorized health apps); safeguards for privacy and consent.
- Clarifications about access to psychotherapy notes, substance-use treatment records, or other sensitive records that may be partially restricted under federal law.
- Enforcement and remedies (administrative oversight, civil penalties, private right of action) and alignment with HIPAA.
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
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