Who Should Own Your Medical Records?

Bill Raduchel
5 min readAug 1, 2022

*Who should own your medical records?* This seems like a straightforward, even simple question. The obvious answer is you. However, while you may have access to your medical records, you do not own them. Everyone else in the ecosystem has a claim on them, but you do not.

There are many reasons for this. First, the information systems and databases that your healthcare providers depend upon are where the records are located. Electronic Health Records (EHRs) have been seen for decades as the pathway to better and more efficient healthcare. Both of those today are assertions more than fact.

Second, the United States is a very litigious society, and every provider wants to be sure it has possession of the information about any treatment you received. This is reasonable, but for most Americans medical care is delivered through a loosely-coupled but unaligned network of individual providers. This results in an error prone and tedious process requiring multiple manual entries of the same data.

Third, the payment system is byzantine at best, with layers of intermediaries who review claims. Assuring payment is the major driver of the information systems the providers use, and your information is shared widely with your insurers.

Fourth, although medical information is protected under the Federal Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA), “deidentified” data is not. Your data is being sold today whether you know it or not, and this is a major source of revenue for…

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Bill Raduchel

Author, The New Technology State and The Bleeding Edge. Strategic advisor on technology and media, independent director and former angel investor.