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Rule 2:505.Healing Arts Practitioner and Patient Privilege (derived from Code § 8.01- 399).

Part Two: Virginia Rules of Evidence · Last amended 2022 · Last verified July 16, 2026

In one sentenceRule 2:505 incorporates the physician-patient privilege from Code section 8.01-399, barring a healing arts practitioner from testifying about a patient’s treatment absent consent, allowing limited discovery when the patient’s condition is at issue, and restricting how lawyers may contact a treating practitioner outside formal discovery.

Full Text of Rule 2:505

Text sizeJump to: (a) (b) (c) (d) (e) (f)

The scope and application of the privilege between a patient and a physician or practitioner of the healing arts in a civil case are as set forth in any specific statutory provisions, including Code § 8.01-399, as amended from time to time, which presently provides:
(a) Except at the request or with the consen t of the patient, or as provided in this section, no duly licensed practitioner of any branch of the healing arts is permitted to testify in any civil action, respecting any information that he may have acquired in attending, examining or treating the patient in a professional capacity.
(b) If the physical or mental condition of the patient is at issue in a civil action, the diagnoses, signs and symptoms, observations, evaluations, histories, or treatment plan of the practitioner, obtained or formulated as contemporaneously documented during the course of the practitioner’s treatment, together with the facts communicated to, or otherwise learned by, such practitioner in connection with such attendance, examination or treatment may be disclosed but only in discovery pursuant to the Rules of Court or through testimony at the trial of the action. In addition, disclosure may be ordered when a court, in the exercise of sound dis cretion, deems it necessary to the proper administration of justice. However, no order may be entered compelling a party to sign a release for medical records from a health care provider unless th e health care provider is not located in the Commonwealth or is a federal facility. If an order is issued pursuant to this section, it must be restricted to the medical records that relate to the physical or mental conditions at issue in the case. No disclosure of diagnosis or treatment plan facts communicated to, or otherwise learned by, such practitioner may occur if the court determines, upon the request of the patient, that such facts are not relevant to the subject matter involved in the pending action or do not appear to be reasonably calculated to lead to the discovery of admissible evidence. Only diagnosis offered to a reasonable degree of medical probability is admissible at trial.
(c) This section will not (i) be construed to repeal or otherwise affect the provisions of § 65.2-607 relating to privileged communications between physicians and surgeons and employees under the Workers’ Compensation Act; (ii) apply to information communicated to any such practitioner in an effort unlawfully to procure a narcotic drug, or unlawfully to procure the administration of any such drug; or (iii) prohibit a duly licensed practitioner of the healing arts, or his agents, from disclosing information as required by state or federal law.
(d) Neither a lawyer nor anyone acting on the lawyer’s behalf may obtain, in connection with pending or threatened litigation, information concerning a patient from a practitioner of any
branch of the healing arts without the consent of the patient, except through discovery pursuant to the Rules of Supreme Court as herein provided. However, the prohibition of this subsection does not apply to:
1. Communication between a lawyer retained to represent a practitioner of the healing arts, or that lawyer’s agent, and that practitioner’s employers, partners, agents, servants, employees, co-employees or others for whom, at law, the practitioner is or may be liable or who, at law, are or may be liable for the practitioner’s acts or omissions;
2. Information about a patient provided to a lawyer or his agent by a practitioner of the healing arts employed by that lawyer to examine or evaluate the patient in accordance with Rule 4:10 of the Rules of Supreme Court; or
3. Contact between a lawyer or his agent and a nonphysician em ployee or agent of a practitioner of healing arts for any of the following purposes: (i) scheduling appearances, (ii) requesting a written recitation by the practitioner of handwritten records obtained by the lawyer or his agent from the practitioner, provided the request is made in writing and, if litigation is pending, a copy of the request and the practitioner’s response is provided simultaneously to the patient or his attorney, (iii) obtaining information necessary to obtain service upon the practitioner in pending litigation, (iv) determining when records summoned will be provided b y the practitioner or his agent, (v) determining what patient records the practitioner possesses in order to summons records in pending litigation, (vi) explaining any summon s that the lawyer or his agent caused to be issued and served on the practitioner, (vii) verifying dates the practitioner treated the patient, provided that if litigation is pending the information obtained by the lawyer or his agent is promptly given, in writing, to the patient or his attorney, (viii) determin in g ch arges by the practitioner for appearance at a deposition or to testify before any tribunal or administrative body, or (ix) providing to or obtaining from the practitioner directions to a place to which he is or will be summoned to give testimony.
(e) A clinical psychologist duly licensed under the provisions of Chapter 36 (§ 54.1-3600 et seq.) of Title 54.1 is considered a practitioner of a branch of the healing arts within the meaning of this section.
(f) Nothing herein prevents a duly licensed practitioner of the healing arts, or his agents, from disclosing any information that he may have acquired in attending, examining or treating a patient in a professional capacity where such disclosure is necessary in connection with the care of the patient, the protection or enforcement of a practitioner’s legal rights including such rights with respect to medical malpractice actions, or the operations of a health care facility or health maintenance organization or in order to comply with state or federal law.

Plain-English Summary

Rule 2:505 does not state its own privilege rule; it incorporates by reference the physician-patient privilege set out in Code section 8.01-399, reproducing the statute’s current text as it applies to civil cases. Subdivision (a) states the default: except at the patient’s request or with the patient’s consent, a duly licensed practitioner of the healing arts cannot testify in a civil action about information acquired while attending, examining, or treating the patient in a professional capacity.

Subdivision (b) opens a controlled path around that default when the patient’s physical or mental condition is itself at issue in the case. The practitioner’s diagnoses, signs and symptoms, observations, evaluations, histories, and treatment plan — as contemporaneously documented — along with facts learned in the course of treatment, may be disclosed, but only through discovery under the Rules of Court or through trial testimony, not through informal channels. A court can order disclosure when necessary to the proper administration of justice, though it cannot compel a party to sign a medical-records release unless the provider is outside Virginia or is a federal facility, and any such order must be limited to records relating to the conditions at issue. If the patient asks and the court finds certain diagnosis or treatment information is not relevant or not reasonably calculated to lead to admissible evidence, that information stays undisclosed — and only a diagnosis offered to a reasonable degree of medical probability is admissible at trial.

Subdivision (d) restricts a different channel: a lawyer, or anyone acting for a lawyer, cannot obtain information about a patient from a healing arts practitioner in connection with litigation without the patient’s consent, except through formal discovery. The rule carves out narrow exceptions — communications between a practitioner’s own defense counsel and the practitioner’s employer or colleagues, information from a practitioner the lawyer hired to examine the patient under Rule 4:10, and limited administrative contact with a practitioner’s staff for scheduling, verifying dates of treatment, explaining a summons, or similar logistics, several of which require the patient or the patient’s attorney to receive simultaneous written notice.

The remaining subdivisions round out the privilege’s edges. Subdivision (c) confirms the privilege does not disturb the separate workers’-compensation privilege for communications between physicians and employers, does not cover information shared in an unlawful attempt to obtain narcotics, and does not stop a practitioner from making disclosures state or federal law requires. Subdivision (e) brings licensed clinical psychologists within the definition of a healing arts practitioner. And subdivision (f) confirms that nothing in the rule stops a practitioner from disclosing information necessary for the patient’s ongoing care, for protecting the practitioner’s own legal rights (including in a malpractice case), for the operation of a health care facility or health maintenance organization, or to comply with other state or federal law.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can a doctor be forced to testify about a patient’s treatment in a Virginia civil case?

Not without the patient’s consent, except as the rule otherwise provides. Rule 2:505(a) bars a duly licensed practitioner of the healing arts from testifying in a civil action about information acquired while attending, examining, or treating the patient in a professional capacity, absent the patient’s request or consent.

What happens to the privilege when the patient’s medical condition is at issue in the lawsuit?

Rule 2:505(b) allows disclosure of the practitioner’s diagnoses, observations, and treatment information, and facts learned during treatment, but only through discovery under the Rules of Court or through testimony at trial — and a court cannot compel a party to sign a records release unless the provider is located outside Virginia or is a federal facility.

Can a lawyer just call up my doctor to ask about my treatment?

No. Rule 2:505(d) bars a lawyer, or anyone acting on the lawyer’s behalf, from obtaining patient information from a healing arts practitioner in connection with litigation without the patient’s consent, except through formal discovery — with narrow exceptions for scheduling, verifying treatment dates, explaining a summons, and similar administrative contact with the practitioner’s staff.

Are clinical psychologists covered by this privilege?

Yes. Rule 2:505(e) states that a clinical psychologist duly licensed under Chapter 36 of Title 54.1 is considered a practitioner of a branch of the healing arts within the meaning of the rule.

Does the privilege stop a doctor from ever discussing a patient’s care with anyone?

No. Rule 2:505(f) preserves a practitioner’s ability to disclose information necessary for the patient’s ongoing care, for protecting the practitioner’s own legal rights (including in a malpractice action), for operating a health care facility or health maintenance organization, or to comply with other state or federal law.

Amendment History

Adopted and promulgated by Order dated June 1, 2012; effective July 1, 2012. Last amended by Order dated June 13, 2022; effective August 12, 2022.

Source & verification. Rule text and amendment history are reproduced verbatim from the Rules of Supreme Court of Virginia, published by the Supreme Court of Virginia. Last verified July 16, 2026. · Official source
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