DEFENDANTS’ DECEDENT’S PHARMACY RECORDS IN THIS BICYCLE-VEHICLE COLLISION CASE ARE NOT PROTECTED BY PHYSICIAN-PATIENT PRIVILEGE AND MUST BE DISCLOSED SUBJECT TO TIME LIMITATIONS AND IN CAMERA REVIEW (FOURTH DEPT).
The Fourth Department, reversing (modifying) Supreme Court, determined that defendants’ decedent’s pharmacy records were not protected by physician-patient privilege and must be disclosed to plaintiff, subject to certain limitations and an in camera review. Plaintiff was injured when her bicycle collided with a vehicle driven by decedent:
We agree with plaintiffs, however, that decedent’s pharmacy records are not protected by the physician-patient privilege (see CPLR 4504 [a] … ) and are “material and necessary” to the prosecution of the action (CPLR 3101 [a] …). Nevertheless, we conclude that plaintiffs’ request for records “before and after” the collision was overly broad, and we therefore limit disclosure of the pharmacy records to the six-month period immediately preceding the collision. Furthermore, those records “should not be released to [plaintiffs] until the court has conducted an in camera review thereof, so that irrelevant information is redacted”… . … [D]efendants are directed to submit to the court, for the six-month period immediately preceding the accident, pharmacy records identifying the medications prescribed to decedent and the prescribed dosages of those medications, and we remit the matter to Supreme Court for an in camera review of those records. Carr-Hoagland v Patterson, 2019 NY Slip Op 02000, Fourth Dept 3-15-19
