Someone else's treatment or charges showed up under your hospital UHID or ABHA number — here is a calm, weekend-ready plan to correct the record and clear the wrong bill.
Reviewed on: 2026-05-29.
When someone else's treatment lands on your health ID, calm and dated proof is what gets your record corrected.
Quick answer
If another patient's treatment or charges are showing under your Unique Health Identification (UHID) or ABHA number, act in writing fast. Tell the hospital's billing desk and grievance or nodal officer that this is a patient-identity mix-up, ask them to correct your record and reverse any wrong charge, and get a written complaint reference. Keep your own bill, ID and discharge papers as proof that the entries are not yours.
RTI usually will not fix this directly. The correction comes from the hospital, the insurer, or — for a government scheme like Ayushman Bharat (PM-JAY) — the State Health Agency. RTI helps only when the records sit with a public body, such as a government hospital, ESIC, CGHS or the scheme authority, and even then it is a records-and-pressure tool, not the refund itself.
This guide is for you if a hospital's records or a bill have mixed up your identity with another patient's. Common situations:
Gather every paper that proves who you are and what care you actually received. Photograph your hospital ID card or registration slip, your own bill, prescriptions and any discharge summary. Note the UHID or ABHA number exactly as printed.
Put the complaint in writing to the hospital. Use the billing desk and the hospital's grievance or nodal officer, not only a phone call. State plainly that this is a patient-identity mix-up under your UHID and ask for two things: correct my record, and reverse any charge that is not mine.
Organise everything into one folder on your phone or email — IDs, bills, the wrong entries, your written complaint and any reply. Write a short, dated timeline of what happened and when you reported it.
| Document or evidence | Why it matters / where to get it |
|---|---|
| Your photo ID and hospital UHID / registration slip | Proves your real identity and the exact number under which the wrong entry sits; it is the anchor of your case. |
| Your own bill and itemised charges | Shows what you actually owe and lets you point to lines or services that are not yours. |
| Discharge summary or treatment notes | Confirms the care you genuinely received, so any extra admission or procedure on the record stands out as wrong. |
| Screenshot of the wrong entry (app, portal or printout) | Captures the mismatched name, age, date or service before anyone edits the record. |
| ABHA / PM-JAY beneficiary details, if applicable | Needed if your government health ID links a hospitalisation that was not yours. |
| Insurer or TPA claim correspondence | Matters if a wrong record caused a claim rejection or a cashless dispute; keep emails and SMS together. |
| Your written complaint and its reference number | The ticket or reference number is your proof of when and how you reported the mix-up. |
| A short dated timeline you write yourself | A one-page sequence of events keeps your case clear at every escalation level. |
| Step | Who to approach | How to reach them | Typical timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hospital billing desk | Front-office billing or registration team | In person or by email, with your ID and bill attached | First response usually within a few days |
| Hospital grievance / nodal officer | Patient grievance or nodal officer named at the hospital | Email or letter quoting your complaint reference and the wrong entries | A couple of weeks |
| Medical superintendent / hospital head | Head of the hospital, or the scheme nodal cell for PM-JAY / ESIC | Written representation; for a scheme, its official grievance channel | As per the hospital or scheme policy |
| Insurer / IRDAI grievance | Your insurer's grievance officer, then IRDAI | Insurer in writing; if unresolved, IRDAI Bima Bharosa portal | Insurer first, then a few weeks at IRDAI |
| Consumer commission | District or State Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission | File online on e-Daakhil at edaakhil.nic.in, or call the National Consumer Helpline | Varies by location and case load |
| RTI to a public hospital or scheme | Public Information Officer of the government hospital or scheme | RTI application; file online where the state portal supports it | As per the RTI Act timeline |
Adapt the bracketed parts. Keep a copy of everything you send.
Subject: Patient-identity mix-up under my UHID [UHID/ABHA number] — request to correct record and reverse wrong charge
To: The Billing Department and Patient Grievance / Nodal Officer [Hospital name], [City] Subject: Another patient's details are recorded under my UHID — please correct my record and reverse any charge that is not mine Dear Sir / Madam, My name is [your full name]. My patient UHID / registration number is [UHID number] and my ABHA number, if linked, is [ABHA number]. I am writing because my hospital record / bill shows treatment or charges that are not mine. The following entries do not belong to me: 1) [date], [service / admission / procedure], shown for patient name [name as printed], which is not my name / details. 2) [date], [amount / charge], which relates to care I did not receive. My own identity and treatment are different, as shown by the documents I am attaching: my photo ID, my registration slip, my actual bill, and my discharge summary / prescriptions. I request you to: - Correct my record so that only my own treatment and details appear under my UHID, and - Reverse / cancel any charge that is not mine, and confirm both in writing. Please also share a complaint reference number and the expected date for the correction. If insurance or a cashless claim is involved, kindly ensure the wrong record is not processed against my policy. If this is not resolved within a reasonable time, I will be constrained to escalate to the appropriate grievance authority, my insurer / IRDAI, or a consumer commission. Kindly treat this as urgent, as a wrong record can affect my future care and claims. Thank you. Name: [your name] UHID / registration number: [number] Registered mobile: [number] Registered email: [email] Date: [date]
RTI can help, but as a records-and-pressure tool — not as the way the correction or refund happens. It works only when the records sit with a public body. That includes a government or municipal hospital, an AIIMS or district hospital, ESIC or CGHS facilities, or the authority behind a government scheme such as Ayushman Bharat (PM-JAY) or a state health scheme. If your wrong entry is under one of these, you can file an RTI with the Public Information Officer to obtain:
These answers become solid evidence if you escalate to the scheme authority, your insurer, or a consumer commission. You can also use CPGRAMS to push a government health department or scheme on the grievance side while the RTI runs.
RTI will not directly force a correction or a refund, and it is the wrong tool when a private hospital holds your records. Private hospitals are not public authorities under the RTI Act, so you cannot file an RTI against a private hospital for your billing trail or to make it correct your file.
For a private hospital, your real remedies are the hospital's own billing and grievance channel, then a consumer complaint on e-Daakhil at edaakhil.nic.in (start by calling the National Consumer Helpline). If the mix-up has hit an insurance or cashless claim, raise it with your insurer in writing and, if unresolved, with IRDAI through the Bima Bharosa portal. An RTI to a government regulator only reveals what that body itself holds — never the private hospital's internal records.
Confirm the entry is truly not yours by comparing it with your ID, your own bill and your discharge papers. Then report it to the hospital's billing desk and grievance officer in writing, ask them to correct the record and reverse any wrong charge, and get a written complaint reference number. Keep all proof in one folder.
No, not if it is genuinely not your charge. A paid wrong amount is harder to reverse cleanly. Pay only your own genuine dues. Clearly flag the disputed lines in writing, ask for a corrected bill, and keep your proof. If they refuse to correct it, escalate rather than pay to close the matter.
No. Private hospitals are not public authorities under the RTI Act, so you cannot RTI them for your records or to force a correction. Use the hospital's grievance channel, then a consumer complaint on e-Daakhil. RTI helps only when a government hospital or a public scheme like PM-JAY or ESIC holds the records.
Yes, more so here. The records sit with a public authority, so you can file an RTI with the scheme or hospital's Public Information Officer for your own record, the correction trail and the reason for any delay. Use that as evidence, and raise the grievance in parallel through the scheme's channel or CPGRAMS.
Tell your insurer or TPA in writing that the rejection is based on a wrong record under your UHID, attach proof of your real identity and treatment, and ask them to reassess. If they do not resolve it, escalate to the insurer's grievance officer and then to IRDAI through the Bima Bharosa portal.
UHID is the Unique Health Identification number a hospital assigns to your file. ABHA is your Ayushman Bharat Health Account, a national health ID. A mix-up means another patient's treatment or charges got attached to your number, so your record or bill now carries care you never received.
Use documents that show your real identity and care: your photo ID, registration slip, your own itemised bill, prescriptions and discharge summary. A different name, age, gender, ward, doctor or date on the disputed entry is strong proof. A dated screenshot of the wrong record, kept unedited, supports your complaint.
Keep everything until the correction is confirmed in writing and, ideally, for some months after. Your IDs, bills, the wrong entries, the complaint reference and replies are needed at each escalation level and are essential if you go to your insurer, IRDAI, a consumer commission or file an RTI.