The Authors

Haley Grieco
Haley GriecoHall Booth Smith
Haley K. Grieco (hgrieco@hallboothsmith.com) is a partner in the Paramus, New Jersey, office of Hall Booth Smith, where she defends physicians, hospitals, and other healthcare providers in a wide range of medical malpractice litigation.
Brooke Reddin
Brooke ReddinHall Booth Smith
Brooke E. Reddin (breddin@hallboothsmith.com) is an associate with the firm, where she focuses her practice on healthcare, medical malpractice, and aging services litigation.
The Journal on Emerging Issues in Litigation
Emerging Litigation Podcast
Emerging Litigation PodcastProduced by HB Litigation and Law Street Media
Interviews with leading attorneys and other subject matter experts on new twists in the law and how the law is responding to new twists in the world.

EMR Audit Trail—What Is It? Why Do They Matter? What Should You Look For?

“As the healthcare industry becomes increasingly digitized, it is imperative that attorneys appreciate the impact it may have on their clients and their practice. In medical malpractice matters, discovery requests for metadata—specifically, the production of the EMR audit trail—has steadily increased over the past few years.”

Abstract: Maintaining electronic medical records, or EMRs, is now a nearly universal best practice among medical providers from small physician practices to large hospital networks. Unlike handwritten or typed records, these digital documents carry with them much more data than meets the eye. In this article, the authors—two medical malpractice attorneys— discuss what attorneys need to know about EMRs in the litigation context and the metadata bread crumb trail they leave behind. They discuss the types of data involved, federal requirements, discovery considerations, privacy implications, and the pros and cons and risks of using these records in defending healthcare providers.

During the past ten years electronic medical records (EMR) have all but rendered obsolete handwritten medical records. Medical providers have had to learn  computer systems, programs, software, hardware, and forms like never before. When hospitals, facilities, and medical offices change EMR systems, the process of learning the new system starts over. But what about the data you do not see? What lurks beneath the surface of the records that providers never see?

This article looks at EMR from the perspective of the individual seeking to understand the data retrospectively in the context of a pending litigation rather than the requirements for those developing and maintaining EMR.

Wakenya Kabui

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