Maryland Code § HG-4-214

Section HG-4-214
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(a) A certificate or record registered under this subtitle may be amended
only in accordance with this subtitle and any rules and regulations that the Secretary
adopts to protect the integrity and accuracy of vital records.

(b) (1) If any certificate of birth, death, or fetal death is amended, the
facts shall be certified to the Secretary and entered on the original certificate with
the date of the amendment, over the signature or initials of a designee of the
Secretary and with a line drawn through the original data.
(2) All amendments may be stored on electronic media approved by
the Secretary.
(3) All copies of certificates that are amended shall contain a notation
that an amendment has been made.
(4) A record shall be maintained which identifies the evidence upon
which the amendment was based, the date of the amendment, and the identity of the
person making the amendment.
(5) When an informant does not submit the minimum documentation
required in the regulations for amending a vital record or when the Secretary has
cause to question the validity or adequacy of the applicant's sworn statements or the
documentary evidence, and if the deficiencies are not corrected, the Secretary shall
not amend the vital record and shall advise the applicant of the reason for this action
and shall further advise the applicant of the right of appeal to the Office of
Administrative Hearings.
(6) (i) Except as provided in subparagraph (ii) of this paragraph,
any amendments to death certificates requested beyond 3 years or more after the
death shall require a court order.
(ii) The Office of the Chief Medical Examiner may amend the
cause of death on a certificate of death at any time after registration without a court
order.
(c) (1) Except as provided in § 4-211(f) of this subtitle, on receipt of a
court order that changes the name of an individual who was born in this State and
on request of the individual or a parent, guardian, or legal representative of the
individual, the Secretary shall amend the certificate of birth to reflect the new name.
(2) (i) The Department may change the name on a birth
certificate once without a court order if, within 12 months after the birth, the
Department receives from both parents named on the birth certificate of the child or,
if only one parent is named, the parent named on the birth certificate of the child:
1. A written request for the change of name; and

2. An affidavit that has been sworn before a notary
public of the State and states that the individual is the parent of the child and is
making the request of the individual's own free will.
(ii) If the Department receives an affidavit in accordance with
subparagraph (i)2 of this paragraph from both parents named on the birth certificate
of the child, only one affidavit signed by both parents is required.

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