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What Happens to Patient Records When a Medical Practice Changes Ownership?

patient records practice ownership change

When a medical practice changes ownership, whether through a sale, merger, acquisition, or partnership restructuring, the transition involves far more than business licenses and billing systems. One of the most critical and legally sensitive issues is what happens to patient medical records.

Patient records are not assets that can be casually transferred like furniture or equipment. They are protected by HIPAA, governed by state retention laws, and subject to strict rules around privacy, access, and continuity of care. Mishandling them during an ownership change can expose both the selling and acquiring parties to regulatory penalties, lawsuits, and patient complaints.

This article explains how patient records must be handled when a medical practice changes ownership, who is responsible at each stage, and how practices can ensure compliance while protecting patients and providers alike.


Ownership transitions often happen quickly, but patient records create long-term obligations that extend well beyond the transaction date.

Key challenges include:

  • Determining who becomes the legal custodian
  • Ensuring uninterrupted patient access
  • Complying with HIPAA and state laws
  • Managing paper and electronic records across systems
  • Communicating changes to patients
  • Preventing unauthorized access or disclosure

If these responsibilities are not clearly defined and properly executed, compliance risks multiply.


One of the most common points of confusion involves ownership versus custody.

The practice entity usually owns the medical record itself (paper or digital).

Patients have legal rights to:

  • Access their records
  • Request copies
  • Direct where records are sent
  • Expect privacy and security

The entity responsible for storing and releasing records is the custodian, and that role can change during an ownership transition.

Understanding this distinction is essential for compliance.


Patient record handling depends on the nature of the transaction.

In a full sale, one entity acquires another practice entirely.

  • Records typically transfer to the acquiring practice
  • The new owner becomes the custodian
  • HIPAA allows this transfer as part of a healthcare operation
  • Records must remain secure during transfer
  • Access controls must be updated
  • Retention schedules must be honored
  • Patients may need to be notified, depending on state law

When two practices merge, records are consolidated.

  • Duplicate patient records
  • Incompatible EMR systems
  • Conflicting retention policies
  • Access confusion across locations

Best practice:

  • Centralize records under a single custodian
  • Digitize legacy paper charts
  • Standardize retention and access rules

If a new partner buys into an existing practice:

  • Custodianship often remains unchanged
  • Access rights may expand
  • HIPAA policies must be updated

This scenario still requires careful documentation to avoid internal misuse of PHI.


When a hospital system acquires a private practice:

  • Records may need to be migrated into the hospital’s EMR
  • Historical charts may remain outside the EMR
  • Long-term retention becomes more complex

Hospitals often rely on third-party custodians during these transitions.


If a selling physician leaves the practice entirely:

  • The acquiring entity typically becomes custodian
  • The departing physician may still retain liability
  • Patient access must remain uninterrupted

Clear agreements are essential to avoid future disputes.


HIPAA permits the transfer of patient records during ownership changes without individual patient authorization—but only if strict safeguards are followed.

  • The transfer is part of healthcare operations
  • Records are used for treatment, payment, or operations
  • Privacy protections remain intact

  • Secure handling during transfer
  • Updated Business Associate Agreements (BAAs)
  • Role-based access controls
  • Audit trails
  • Minimum necessary access

Failure to follow these rules can result in violations—even if the transfer itself is allowed.


Ownership changes do not reset retention clocks.

  • Adult records may need to be retained 6–10 years
  • Pediatric records often until age 21–28
  • OB/GYN and behavioral health records may require longer retention

The new owner inherits these obligations.

Destroying records early—even unintentionally—can result in penalties years after the transaction.


Whether patients must be notified depends on state law and the transaction structure.

  • Change in custodian
  • Practice closure or relocation
  • Significant change in how records are accessed
  • Transfer of records outside the local community

Notifications typically explain:

  • Who now holds the records
  • How patients can request copies
  • Where to direct future record requests

Failure to notify properly can lead to patient complaints and regulatory scrutiny.


Paper records create some of the greatest risks during transitions.

  • Lost boxes during office moves
  • Untracked access
  • Improper storage
  • Unauthorized disposal
  • Incomplete inventories

  • Inventory all paper charts
  • Barcode and track boxes
  • Store records in HIPAA-compliant facilities
  • Digitize where possible
  • Use professional medical records custodians

Third-party custodians often serve as neutral, compliant handlers during ownership changes.


EMR transitions are often more complex than expected.

  • Incompatible EMR platforms
  • Partial data migrations
  • Missing attachments or scanned files
  • Metadata loss
  • Access gaps

  • Who maintains access to legacy systems
  • How historical records will be accessed
  • How audit logs are preserved
  • How patient requests are fulfilled

Many practices retain a hybrid solution—EMR for active patients and custodial storage for historical records.


Medical records custodians play a crucial role in reducing risk during transitions.

They provide:

  • Secure storage for paper and digital records
  • Chain-of-custody documentation
  • Patient request handling
  • Retention tracking
  • HIPAA-compliant access controls
  • Neutral third-party oversight

Custodians are especially valuable when:

  • Practices close locations
  • Physicians retire
  • Records are split between entities
  • Long-term retention is required

Improper record handling during ownership changes can result in:

  • HIPAA violations
  • State investigations
  • Civil lawsuits
  • Loss of licensure
  • Delayed patient care
  • Reputational damage

Importantly, both the selling and acquiring parties may remain liable if responsibilities are not clearly assigned.


To minimize risk, practices should follow these steps:

Define who becomes custodian and who handles future requests.

Paper and electronic, active and inactive.

By state, specialty, and patient age.

Including BAAs and privacy policies.

Use tracked, professional services—not ad hoc moves.

If required by law or best practice.

Especially for long-term retention and ROI management.


From the patient’s perspective, ownership changes should be invisible.

Patients should still be able to:

  • Request records
  • Transfer records to new providers
  • Expect privacy
  • Receive timely responses

Any disruption is a sign of poor transition planning.


When a medical practice changes ownership, patient records remain a long-term legal and ethical responsibility. While HIPAA allows records to transfer as part of healthcare operations, strict safeguards must be followed to protect patient privacy, ensure access, and comply with retention laws.

Clear agreements, secure handling, proper custodianship, and thoughtful planning are essential to preventing compliance failures during ownership transitions.

Emerald Document Imaging helps medical practices, physician groups, and health systems manage patient records during sales, mergers, and acquisitions through secure custodial services, digitization, retention management, and compliant release-of-information workflows.

Reach out today to make Emerald your trusted medical records custodian →

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