The document that runs your healthcare
Every referral, every insurance decision, every new specialist visit starts with the same thing: your medical record. When it's accurate and complete, the system works better. When it's not, the consequences fall on you.
What your medical record actually does
Most people think of their medical record as a history of their visits. It is that, but it also functions as the primary decision-making document for everyone involved in your care. Insurance companies use it to authorize or deny treatments. Specialists read it before your first appointment. Emergency departments rely on it when you can't speak for yourself.
The record contains visit notes, lab results, imaging reports, medication lists, diagnoses, and provider assessments. Each entry is written by a provider, typically during or immediately after a visit, often under significant time pressure. That time pressure means things get missed, simplified, or occasionally recorded inaccurately.
The accuracy problem
Studies consistently show that medical records contain errors. Some are minor (a date, a dosage). Others are significant: a symptom described as "resolved" when it hasn't been, a diagnosis recorded without the context that explains it, or a treatment history that omits key details. These errors matter because downstream decisions are made based on what the record says, not on what actually happened.
When an insurer denies a prior authorization, the denial is often based on a review of the medical record. If the record doesn't document the clinical necessity clearly, the denial stands, even if the treatment is medically appropriate. The gap between what your provider knows about your case and what the record communicates to a third party can be the difference between approval and denial.
Your rights as a patient
Under federal law (the 21st Century Cures Act and HIPAA), you have the right to access your medical records, and providers must share them with you in a timely manner. You also have the right to request amendments if you believe something in the record is inaccurate or incomplete.
Requesting an amendment doesn't guarantee it will be accepted. Providers can decline if they believe the record is accurate. But the request itself becomes part of the record, and that documentation can matter if a disputed entry leads to a coverage denial or misdiagnosis later.
What you can do about it
The first step is reading your records. Most health systems now offer patient portal access where you can review visit notes, lab results, and provider assessments. Read them after each visit. Compare what was documented with what you remember happening.
If something looks wrong, you have options. You can submit a formal amendment request through your provider's medical records department. You can also raise the issue directly with your provider at your next visit. In either case, having your own organized documentation of what happened, what you reported, and what was discussed makes the process significantly easier.
This is where PatientLead Health tools come in. Throughline helps you build that organized documentation over time through natural conversation, creating structured records of your symptoms, treatment history, and provider interactions. When you need to reference something specific or submit a correction, the information is already organized and ready.
Start organizing your care story
Throughline helps you build accurate, structured documentation of your medical history through conversation. No forms, no templates, just tell it what's going on.