What is the HIPAA Right of Access and When Must Covered Entities Respond to Right of Access Requests?

Modified on Wed, 8 Nov, 2023 at 2:45 PM

What is the HIPAA Right of Access?

The HIPAA Privacy Rule generally provides individuals with a legal, enforceable right to see and receive, upon request, copies of the information in their medical and other health records maintained by their healthcare providers and health plans. This right is known as the HIPAA “right of access.”

What is the Timeline for a Response to a Right of Acess Request?
In providing access to the individual, a covered entity must provide access to the PHI requested, in whole, or in part (if there is a valid reason to deny access to part of the PHI, no later than 30 calendar days from receiving the individual's request. The 30 calendar days is an outer limit and covered entities are encouraged to respond as soon as possible by HHS. Indeed, a covered entity may have the capacity to provide individuals with almost instantaneous or very prompt electronic access to the PHI requested through personal health records, web portals, or similar electronic means. Further, individuals may reasonably expect a covered entity to be able to respond in a much faster timeframe when the covered entity is using health information technology in its day-to-day operations.


If a covered entity is unable to provide access within 30 calendar days -- for example, where the information is archived offsite and not readily accessible -- the covered entity may extend the time by no more than an additional 30 days. To extend the time, the covered entity must, within the initial 30 days, inform the individual in writing of the reasons for the delay and the date by which the covered entity will provide access. Only one extension is permitted per access request.

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