Recording Medical Appointments as a Patient or Caregiver
Recording your own doctor’s appointment is, in most US states, lawful as a one-party-consent recording. Recording for an aging parent or a minor child is more complex, and hospital policies may add a layer the law does not.
The legal overlay specific to this role
- For yourself. In one-party-consent states, you may record your own appointment without telling the doctor. The cautious practice is to tell them anyway.
- For another adult. You generally need that adult’s consent. Power of attorney for healthcare may extend to recording where the principal is incapacitated, but the analysis is state-specific.
- For a minor child. Vicarious-consent doctrine (the “Pollock” rule, Pollock v. Pollock, 154 F.3d 601 (6th Cir. 1998)) permits a parent to consent on behalf of a minor in many jurisdictions for recordings reasonably believed to be in the child’s best interest.
- Hospital and clinic policies. Many institutions have a no-recording policy as a condition of being on the premises. The policy is a contract matter, not a criminal one — violating it may get you removed or barred, not prosecuted.
- HIPAA applies to the provider, not to the patient. You are not a HIPAA-covered entity by recording your own appointment.
A practical workflow
- Ask the provider at the start: “I’d like to record this so I can review later. Is that OK?” Almost all providers say yes.
- Use a phone’s voice memo app for in-person appointments. For telehealth, the provider’s platform may have a recording feature.
- Store on the patient’s device. Encrypt the device.
- Use it. The point is to listen back, take notes, share with family members involved in care.
Consent script tailored to this role
Doctor, I’d like to record so I can listen back and remember the details. Is that OK?
Tools and platforms suited to this role
- Voice Memos (iOS) or any Android recorder for in-person.
- The provider’s telehealth recording feature for video appointments.
- Apps like Abridge or DAX Copilot that some health systems offer to patients with built-in transcription.
Common mistakes
- Recording a hospital staff conversation that is not your appointment. That is not your one-party-consent recording.
- Sharing the recording with people the patient has not authorized to know.
- Treating the recording as a medical record. The provider’s notes are the official record.
Where to get help
- The provider’s patient advocate or social-work office.
- State health-department resources on patient rights.
- An elder-law attorney for power-of-attorney questions.