Healthcare professionals, I need your advice.
My doctor has another patient with the same name and birthday as me (but different year.) It's a really weird coincidence, because my name is not that common. I've known about the other woman for a while because of things that the receptionist has said when she confirms addresses, etc.
When their office converted from paper to digital, someone must have thought that there were two charts for one patient, and they combined them. This other woman's stuff is all over my chart, and I assume some of my stuff is in her chart. I don't know.
I figured this out when I kept calling for refills and they kept saying that they had called it in, but the pharmacy was like "we haven't heard from them". And then I couldn't sign up for the patient portal because my "birthdate was incorrect." When I went in for a recent appointment, the health care provider started reading things that were on my chart aloud, but they weren't mine. She read it all and asked if it was correct. I know that this woman has heart disease, diabetes, her dad died of a twisted gut, she has two brothers, etc.
They say they're in process of correcting my chart, but it's still not right.
This is a huge HIPAA violation, yes?
I'm very concerned that her health history being in any way connected to my records could cause trouble for me in the future if I need to apply for life insurance or something, or that her conditions are being reported to my insurance or vice versa.
In order to protect myself, I need to report the HIPAA violation, right? I want it on record that the charts are messed up. Is this going to make my dcotor hate me? Aren't they supposed to report the violation, too?
[This message edited by SacredSoul33 at 8:42 PM, Wednesday, April 3rd]
Remove the "I want you to like me" sticker from your forehead and place it on the mirror, where it belongs. ~ Susan Jeffers
Your nervous system will always choose a familiar hell over an unfamiliar heaven.