Patients today have more rights than ever before to access their medical information quickly and without unnecessary barriers. For mental health providers, this means ensuring that clinical notes, diagnoses, medication lists, and test results are completed promptly and made available to patients when requested. Two major federal frameworks govern this:
Together, these create a legal expectation for timely, transparent, and accurate documentation, while still allowing clinicians to protect sensitive psychotherapy notes.
PMHScribe is built to support these requirements by helping clinicians complete documentation quickly, accurately, and in a compliant format.
Under HIPAA, patients have the right to receive copies of their health records within 30 days of a request. This includes:
Failure to provide records within this timeframe is a HIPAA violation.
The Office for Civil Rights (OCR) has made this a major enforcement priority through the HIPAA Right of Access Initiative, and many clinics, including mental health practices, have been fined. Recent publicly reported examples include:
These cases show that even small practices can face real financial penalties when they fail to release patient records in a timely manner.
The 21st Century Cures Act requires healthcare providers to avoid “information blocking,” which means any action that unreasonably prevents or delays access to a patient’s electronic health information (EHI).
This includes:
While the Cures Act’s large civil monetary penalties primarily target EHR vendors and health information networks, individual providers are not exempt from accountability.
Under newly finalized federal regulations, providers who engage in information blocking may face:
These are not hypothetical; HHS has announced that enforcement is expanding, and provider penalties are now activated in federal regulations.
Despite these access requirements, psychotherapy notes have special protection under HIPAA. As long as they are:
They do not need to be released to patients and are exempt from both HIPAA Right of Access and Cures Act information blocking.
The safest and most compliant workflow for mental health clinicians is:
PMHScribe automatically supports this distinction by enabling clinicians to generate two different types of documentation from the same session.
Most HIPAA right-of-access violations happen because providers fall behind on notes. PMHScribe’s real-time speech-to-text helps clinicians close notes quickly so patients can receive their information without delays.
PMHScribe organizes content correctly, ensuring that:
This supports compliance with both HIPAA and the Cures Act.
PMHScribe’s psychiatric-specific templates help capture:
This reduces the risk of incomplete or unclear documentation, which could otherwise cause delays or inadvertent information blocking.
Disclaimer: This content is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for legal advice. Consult your practice’s legal or compliance advisor for guidance on HIPAA, the 21st Century Cures Act, or information-blocking obligations.