New Mexico Administrative Code
Title 16 - OCCUPATIONAL AND PROFESSIONAL LICENSING
Chapter 10 - MEDICINE AND SURGERY PRACTITIONERS
Part 17 - MANAGEMENT OF MEDICAL RECORDS
Section 16.10.17.10 - RETENTION, MAINTENANCE AND DESTRUCTION OF MEDICAL RECORDS
Current through Register Vol. 35, No. 18, September 24, 2024
A. Improper management of medical records, including failure to maintain timely, accurate, legible and complete medical records constitutes a violation of 61-6-15.D(33). Physicians must provide every patient with a written copy of their policy or their employer's policy for medical record retention, maintenance and destruction.
B. Written medical record policy shall include:
C. Electronic medical record policy shall include:
D. Physicians must retain medical records that they own for at least ten (10) years after the date of last treatment or the time frame set by state or federal insurance laws or by medicare and medicaid regulation. Medical records for patients who are minors must be retained until the date that the patient is twenty-one (21) years old. If a physician converts hard copies of medical records to electronic medical records, the hard copy shall be retained by the physician for a minimum of thirty (30) days after electronic transfer has occurred.
E. Physicians shall retain medical billing information for at least two (2) years after the date of last treatment.
F. The board adopts the ethical standards for medical record retention and maintenance set forth in the latest published version of the "code of medical ethics current opinions with annotations" of the council on ethical and judicial affairs of the American medical association. Physicians have an obligation to retain patient records which may reasonably be of value to a patient. Beyond the time frame established in Subsection D of this section, medical considerations are the primary basis for deciding how long to retain medical records. In deciding whether to keep certain parts of the record, an appropriate criterion is whether a physician would want the information if he or she were seeing the patient for the first time. For example, operative notes, chemotherapy records and immunization records must remain part of the patient's chart.
G. Destruction of medical records must be such that confidentiality is maintained. Records must be destroyed by shredding, incinerating (where permitted) or by other method of permanent destruction, including purging of medical records from a computer hard drive, server hard drive or other computer media or disk in accordance with existing practices for data deletion then available.
H. A log must be kept of all charts destroyed, including the patient's name and date of record destruction in accordance and under the same time frame established in Subsection D of this section.