I wanted to ask everyone who has ordered GCMS notes, just out of curiosity, if you can look at all the dates and times that are noted in the file?
I don't know if there is any significance to this, but as the notes don't really make much sense information wise, I just noted down all the different dates that were given, and I have to assume that every time my file is looked at or updated, a time stamp goes on it, no matter what the information was (as I can't really tell from the notes).
For example, most of the date/times I noticed were at CPC-M when I submitted the file (oct-2011), about 45 days after that (late nov-2011), and the date file transferred to CHC-I (dec-2011). Then I saw dates separated mostly by 30 or 60 days (almost exactly 30 or 60 days). Jan-2012, Feb-2012, April-2012, June-2012, and my notes were generated early July.
Most of the dates were noted under the "Application" heading or the "Physical File" heading.
If everyone did this, we could figure out their general working pattern (I'm sure there has to be one, they have to work under policies) and see the difference in cases filed at different times, or with different circumstances. Or there could be no pattern at all, which would be more disturbing news :-/
I don't know if there is any significance to this, but as the notes don't really make much sense information wise, I just noted down all the different dates that were given, and I have to assume that every time my file is looked at or updated, a time stamp goes on it, no matter what the information was (as I can't really tell from the notes).
For example, most of the date/times I noticed were at CPC-M when I submitted the file (oct-2011), about 45 days after that (late nov-2011), and the date file transferred to CHC-I (dec-2011). Then I saw dates separated mostly by 30 or 60 days (almost exactly 30 or 60 days). Jan-2012, Feb-2012, April-2012, June-2012, and my notes were generated early July.
Most of the dates were noted under the "Application" heading or the "Physical File" heading.
If everyone did this, we could figure out their general working pattern (I'm sure there has to be one, they have to work under policies) and see the difference in cases filed at different times, or with different circumstances. Or there could be no pattern at all, which would be more disturbing news :-/