Medical records are the foundation of nearly every GLP-1 drug injury claim. They document what happened, when it happened, how severe the injury was, and whether it caused lasting harm. While you do not need records to start a review, claims that proceed rely heavily on complete, accurate documentation.

This page explains which records matter most, how to obtain them, and how they’re used during case evaluation and settlement.

Why Medical Records Are So Important

In GLP-1 litigation, medical records are used to:

  • confirm diagnosis (e.g., gastroparesis, pancreatitis, kidney injury)
  • prove severity (hospitalization, surgery, dialysis)
  • establish a timeline linking drug use to injury
  • demonstrate persistence or permanence
  • calculate compensation (medical costs, disability, lost income)

Without records, even severe symptoms can be difficult to prove legally.

You Do Not Need Records to Start a Case Review

Many people delay because they think they must gather everything first.

You can begin a review without records. Legal teams can often help request them once eligibility is established.

➡️ Start review: File a Claim

The Most Important Records for GLP-1 Claims

Hospital & ER Records (Highest Priority)

These are often the most valuable documents.

Include:

  • ER triage notes
  • admission and discharge summaries
  • physician progress notes
  • diagnoses and ICD codes
  • IV fluids, medications, procedures

Hospitalization is a major indicator of claim strength.

Diagnostic Testing Records

Depending on the injury, these may include:

  • Gastroparesis: gastric emptying studies, motility testing
  • Pancreatitis: lipase/amylase labs, CT/MRI
  • Kidney injury: creatinine, eGFR, BUN trends
  • Gallbladder disease: ultrasound, CT, MRCP
  • Obstruction: CT scans, abdominal imaging

Objective tests are often decisive in eligibility reviews.

Specialist Records

Notes from specialists add credibility and detail, including:

  • gastroenterology (GI)
  • nephrology (kidney)
  • surgery
  • internal medicine
  • nutrition or motility clinics

Specialist confirmation strengthens causation arguments.

Surgical Records (If Applicable)

If you had surgery, the following are critical:

  • operative report
  • pathology report
  • post-op hospital notes
  • complications or follow-up care

Examples:

  • gallbladder removal
  • bowel intervention
  • feeding tube placement

Prescription & Pharmacy Records

These help confirm exposure and timing.

Include:

  • medication name
  • dosage
  • start and stop dates
  • refill history
  • dose escalation notes

Even approximate timelines can be sufficient initially.

Records That Show Severity and Impact

Beyond diagnosis, lawyers look for proof of impact, such as:

  • repeated hospital visits
  • ICU stays
  • dialysis
  • long recovery periods
  • specialist follow-ups
  • ongoing medication use
  • documented inability to eat or work normally

How Records Help Establish a Timeline

A strong timeline often shows:

  1. GLP-1 drug started
  2. symptoms escalated (often after dose increase)
  3. ER visit or hospitalization
  4. diagnosis confirmed
  5. symptoms persisted or injury worsened
  6. long-term impairment documented

Records that clearly show this progression are extremely valuable.

What If Records Are Incomplete or Missing?

This is common. You may still qualify if:

  • records exist at multiple facilities
  • older records can be requested
  • diagnosis was delayed
  • symptoms were documented over time

Legal teams often request records directly from providers with your authorization.

How to Get Your Medical Records

Option 1: Request Them Yourself

You can request records from:

  • hospitals
  • clinics
  • imaging centers
  • labs

Most providers have online portals or medical records departments.

Option 2: Let the Legal Team Request Them

Once a review begins, many firms will:

  • send HIPAA authorizations
  • request records on your behalf
  • organize and review documentation

This is often easier for claimants.

How Long Record Collection Takes

Timeframes vary:

  • small clinics: days to weeks
  • hospitals: 2–6 weeks
  • multiple facilities: longer

Starting early helps avoid delays if deadlines apply.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • waiting to start a review until records are gathered
  • assuming one ER visit “doesn’t count”
  • forgetting imaging or lab-only visits
  • not listing all treating facilities
  • discarding pharmacy receipts or summaries

Even partial documentation can matter.

How Records Are Used Later in the Case

Medical records may be used to:

  • support filing decisions
  • assign settlement tiers
  • evaluate permanence
  • calculate damages
  • counter defense arguments
  • support expert opinions

Accuracy and completeness matter at every stage.

Privacy and Confidentiality

Medical records are handled under strict confidentiality rules and are used only for:

  • case evaluation
  • litigation preparation
  • settlement processing

They are not shared publicly.

How to Prepare Before Starting

If you want to be proactive, consider:

  • writing a symptom timeline
  • listing all hospitals and doctors
  • noting dates of ER visits or surgery
  • identifying where imaging or labs were done

➡️ Symptom guide: Documenting Symptoms

How to Start a Review (Even Without Records)

You can begin with just:

  • the GLP-1 drug you used
  • approximate dates
  • major symptoms or diagnosis
  • whether you were hospitalized or had surgery

➡️ Start here: File a Claim
➡️ Eligibility criteria: Criteria

Related Internal Links

Medical records are essential to proving GLP-1 injury claims, but you do not need them to start. Hospital records, diagnostic testing, specialist notes, surgical reports, and prescription history all play key roles in determining eligibility, severity, and compensation. Early review helps preserve evidence and avoid delays.

➡️ Start your review: File a Claim