Code of Massachusetts Regulations
233 CMR - BOARD OF REGISTRATION OF CHIROPRACTORS
Title 233 CMR 4.00 - Standards of Practice and Professional Conduct
Section 4.05 - Chiropractic Record-keeping
Current through Register 1531, September 27, 2024
(1) A chiropractor shall establish and maintain a separate, adequate and accurate written clinical record for each patient in his or her care. The record shall be kept in chronological order and record entries shall be made contemporaneously. Each such entry shall be signed by, or shall otherwise adequately identify, the registered chiropractor who is treating the patient to whom the record pertains. Such records shall be legible and self-explanatory. Such records shall include, at a minimum, documentation of the following:
(2) Except as provided in 233 CMR 4.05(3) or (4), 4.16 and 5.06: Inspections clinical records and all information contained therein shall be kept confidential to the extent provided by state or federal law.
(3) Upon the written request of the patient, the patient's authorized legal representative, or, in the case of an unemancipated minor patient, the patient's parent or legal guardian, a chiropractor shall furnish a complete copy of that patient's clinical records, including all supporting documentation and reports, to the party authorized to receive it. A reasonable fee may be charged for this service.
(4) A chiropractor shall furnish to the Board or its duly authorized representative a complete copy of a Patient Record upon written request promptly and, in no instance, more than 30 days after date of request. No fee may be charged for this service.
(5) No patient shall be required to sign any release from liability or waiver as a condition for the receipt of his or her clinical record pursuant to 233 CMR 4.05(3).
(6) Violation of any provision of 233 CMR 4.05 shall be considered unprofessional conduct within the meaning of M.G.L. c. 112, § 93, and shall constitute sufficient grounds for disciplinary action by the Board.
(7) Record Retention. Patient Records and Business Records shall be stored in a manner that protects them from foreseeable damage or destruction.
(8) Upon cessation of his or her practice, a Chiropractor shall transfer all Patient and Business Records, which are less than seven years old to a location where such records may be inspected and copied by patients.