If your hospital will not hand over your case file after discharge, or says it is lost, ask in writing today and escalate fast if they stall.
Reviewed on: 2026-05-29.
When your hospital file goes missing after discharge, the fix starts with a dated written request for your full records.
Quick answer
You have a right to a copy of your own medical records. If a hospital will not give you the case file, treatment notes, investigation reports, or discharge summary after discharge, send a written request naming exactly what you need. Under widely followed medical-ethics rules, a hospital is expected to hand over copies within a short fixed period of a written request, so do not accept vague delays or a flat refusal.
Your route depends on who runs the hospital. For a private hospital, RTI does not apply; put the request in writing, then escalate to the State Medical Council or National Medical Commission and through the consumer route on e-Daakhil or the National Consumer Helpline. For a government or public hospital, you can also file an RTI and use CPGRAMS to force the records and accountability.
This guide is for you if a hospital has not given you, or cannot produce, your medical records after the patient was discharged. It fits situations like these:
Pin down exactly what is missing and ask for it in writing.
Confirm whether the records are being withheld or claimed lost, and set your deadline.
Line up the right escalation so you can act first thing Monday.
| Document or evidence | Why it matters / where to get it |
|---|---|
| Dated written request for records | Your letter or email naming each document you want; the date starts the clock and proves you asked formally. |
| Acknowledgement or stamped received copy | Shows the hospital received your request on a specific date, which is essential if they later stall or deny it. |
| Admission slip, bill, and receipts | Prove the patient was admitted and treated there, so the hospital cannot deny holding any record. |
| Patient photo ID and proof of relationship | Confirm who is entitled to the records; a relative or nominee usually needs to show authority to receive them. |
| Any partial records already given | A lone discharge summary or stray report shows what exists and helps you list precisely what is still missing. |
| Insurer's communication, if a claim is affected | An email or letter rejecting or holding the claim for want of records links the missing file to a real, datable loss. |
| Written 'lost / destroyed' admission, if any | If staff put in writing that records cannot be traced, this turns a delay into a record-keeping failure you can escalate. |
| Your complaint and its reference number | The grievance you send and the ticket or reference issued form the base for escalation to a council, consumer forum, or RTI. |
| Step | Who to approach | How to reach them | Typical timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Medical-records department | The records or health-information desk of the hospital | Submit a dated written request listing each document; get a stamped or emailed acknowledgement | Within the short period set by medical-ethics rules |
| 2. Medical superintendent / grievance officer | The head of the hospital or its designated grievance officer | Write referencing your earlier request and its date; ask for the records and a written reason for delay | A few days to a couple of weeks |
| 3. State Medical Council / NMC | State Medical Council, or the National Medical Commission | Send a written complaint about withholding or losing records, with your dated request and replies attached | As per the council |
| 4. Consumer commission (e-Daakhil) | District consumer disputes redressal commission | File online through e-Daakhil, or call the National Consumer Helpline first for guidance | Varies by commission |
| 5. RTI (government hospital only) | Public Information Officer of the government hospital or health department | File an RTI for your records and the file-movement or destruction register | About a few weeks, as per the portal |
| 6. CPGRAMS / Insurance ombudsman | CPGRAMS for a government hospital; the insurance ombudsman if a claim is blocked | Lodge a CPGRAMS grievance, or escalate a stuck claim via the insurer's grievance cell and Bima Bharosa | As per the portal |
Adapt the bracketed parts. Keep a copy of everything you send.
Subject: Request for full medical records of [Patient Name], IP/UHID No. [] - copies sought under patients' right to records
To, The Medical Records Department / Medical Superintendent [Hospital Name], [City] Subject: Request for complete medical records of [Patient Name] (IP/UHID No. [____], admitted [admission date], discharged [discharge date]) Dear Sir/Madam, The above patient was admitted and treated at your hospital during the period stated. As the patient / authorised representative, I request copies of the complete medical records, including: 1. Indoor case sheet and treatment notes 2. Doctor's progress notes and nursing charts 3. All laboratory, pathology, and radiology / scan reports 4. Operation / procedure notes and anaesthesia record, if any 5. The full discharge summary I understand that, under the applicable medical-ethics rules, a hospital is required to provide copies of a patient's records within a short fixed period of a written request. I therefore request that these copies be made available to me within that period. I enclose proof of admission (bill / admission slip), the patient's photo ID, and proof of my relationship / authority to receive these records. Please confirm receipt of this request and inform me of any reasonable copying charges. If any of the above records cannot be located or have been destroyed, please confirm this in writing, stating which records are affected and the reason. Kindly treat this as a formal request and provide the records, or a written reply, at the earliest. Thank you. Yours faithfully, [Full Name] [Relationship to patient, if applicable] [Mobile number] | [Email] [Date]
RTI works only where a public authority holds the records, and it gets you documents and accountability rather than damages. RTI genuinely helps when:
RTI does not reach a purely private hospital, and it cannot, by itself, order the records to be handed over. Most corporate hospitals and nursing homes are private bodies, so RTI does not apply to them.
No. You have a right to copies of your own medical records, and under widely followed medical-ethics rules a hospital is expected to supply them within a short fixed period of a written request. Put your request in writing, list each document, and keep an acknowledgement. If they still refuse, escalate to the State Medical Council, the consumer forum, or, for a government hospital, through RTI.
Get the 'lost' or 'destroyed' claim in writing, because a hospital is expected to keep inpatient records for a defined period, and losing them is a record-keeping failure. For a private hospital, complain to the State Medical Council and through the consumer route. For a government hospital, file an RTI for the file-movement, indexing, or destruction register to find out whether the record existed and what happened to it.
Under commonly followed medical-ethics norms, a hospital is expected to provide copies of a patient's records within a short fixed period of receiving a written request. Because the exact rule can vary, do not rely on a number you saw informally; send a dated written request, note that copies are due within that period, and keep proof. If they miss it, that delay itself strengthens your complaint.
Only for a government or public hospital, where you can seek copies of your records and the registers showing how the file was kept or destroyed. RTI also helps where a government health scheme like CGHS, ECHS, or PM-JAY is involved. RTI does not apply to a private hospital and cannot, by itself, order the records to be handed over.
Start with a dated written request to the medical-records department or grievance officer for copies of all records. If they withhold or cannot produce them, complain to the State Medical Council or the National Medical Commission. Refusing or losing records can also be a deficiency in service, so you can file on the e-Daakhil consumer portal or call the National Consumer Helpline.
Tell your insurer in writing that the hospital is delaying the discharge summary or case papers, and ask the insurer to seek the file directly from the hospital. At the same time, send the hospital a dated written request. If the insurer does not resolve it, escalate to the insurer's grievance cell and then to the insurance ombudsman through IRDAI's Bima Bharosa system.
Usually yes, with proof of authority. A close relative, nominee, or legal representative can normally request the records, but the hospital may ask for the patient's photo ID, proof of relationship, and, in some cases, the patient's consent or a legal-heir document where the patient has died. Carry these so the hospital cannot use missing authority as a reason to delay.
You can ask for the full file, not just a summary: the indoor case sheet, doctor's progress notes, nursing charts, all laboratory, pathology, and radiology reports, operation and anaesthesia notes, and the complete discharge summary. List each item by name in your written request so the hospital cannot hand over one page and treat the request as closed.