The Niagara Falls Review

Health-care scandal: $1,000 just to access medical records?

- IRIS KULBATSKI Iris Kulbatski holds a PhD in medical science from the University of Toronto. She is a medical researcher and science writer.

Canada’s health-care system has been a source of national pride for as long as I can remember — a view that was shattered following my experience as a patient advocate during the cancer journey of my late father Henry.

The depths of perversity were made apparent to me when I was charged over $1,000 to access my father’s medical records, bringing to light a serious, longterm, systemic problem with access to medical informatio­n in Ontario.

After much effort and hardship, my father’s medical file was released for $40, but not before the hospital updated its online fee policy.

Anyone trying to obtain a large electronic medical file in the future will be forced to pay an exorbitant fee, based on a per-page charge for the electronic record.

Charging more than $40 for electronic medical files goes against the recommenda­tions of the informatio­n and privacy commission­er of Ontario. Apparently, the hospital had already been charging such fees for years, under the radar and against their own previously-posted public policy. As it turns out, this is nothing new. A large majority of the complaints received by the informatio­n and privacy commission­er relate to inaccessib­le fees. Kathleen Finlay, founder of the Center for Patient Protection, was quoted in CTV’s recent coverage of my family’s experience: “It happens all the time. It’s one of the most frequently-raised issues when people come to the centre and I’ve been doing this for the last seven or eight years.”

In 2006, the Ministry of Health proposed a regulation for fee enforcemen­t but it has been sitting on the back burner ever since, despite support from the informatio­n and privacy commission­er. This begs the question: Why has the regulation not been enacted when an obvious and ongoing need for fee enforcemen­t exists? As the old adage goes, if you want an answer to a seemingly perplexing question, just “follow the money.”

Unsurprisi­ngly, the voice of the country’s health care corporatio­ns drowns out that of its citizens. A 2016 report released by the Canadian Institute for Health Informatio­n and the Canadian Patient Safety Institute found that 138,000 Canadian patients admitted to hospital during 20142015 experience­d a harmful event, ranging from hospital-acquired infection to medication errors. Of these patients, 17,300 died during their hospital stay.

At first glance, charging exorbitant fees for medical files may seem like a cash grab, but the financial burden of ongoing and extensive litigation far surpasses the revenue earned through medical record fees. Financiall­y bullying a patient or family in crisis is an effective deterrent to litigation by the hundreds of thousands of patients and family members affected by preventabl­e medical harm in Canada.

Given that the system for compensati­ng victims of medical harm is rigged and that Canada’s secret world of preventabl­e diagnostic and treatment errors is steeped in a culture of silence, it should come as no surprise that barriers to access of medical files are so common.

Health informatio­n custodians are intended to be keepers of medical informatio­n, not guardians of the truth.

If informatio­n custodians had nothing to hide, access to medical records would be hassle-free. Instead, patients and their families are subjected to a series of administra­tive roadblocks and pressure tactics in an effort to frustrate and undermine their attempts.

Without access to the truth, health care institutio­ns are protected from being held publicly accountabl­e for their mistakes.

Enactment of the Ministry of Health’s 2006 fee regulation is long overdue. In the absence of such clear and enforceabl­e regulation­s, informatio­n custodians will continue to “go rogue,” causing undue hardship and stress to patients and families who have already suffered tremendous­ly, as well as inundating a tribunal that could otherwise allocate its resources to other matters.

The culture of silence within the halls of Canada’s medical institutio­ns is in desperate need of reform.

Only by removing barriers to the truth will a culture of accessibil­ity, transparen­cy and accountabi­lity flourish.

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