(dissenting). If the defendant had been entitled to a perfect trial, I would comfortably side with the majority. But he was not. See Commonwealth v. Lodge, 431 Mass. 461, 476 (2000). Mistakes were made at this trial, which in my estimation does not separate it from many others, if any at all. While I agree with the majority’s finding of error in the admission of the unredacted hospital records, I part company with them on the issue of prejudice. Although our difference is a matter of *853degree, my view is that the defendant received a fair trial. Because I do not believe a new trial is required, I respectfully dissent.
1. Background. The facts of this case are as sad as they are ugly. The majority’s truncated recitation of the events surrounding the hospital records fails to provide a sufficient picture of what occurred at trial. A full picture is necessary to determine if, and to what extent, the defendant was prejudiced by the admission of the unredacted hospital records.
a. The Commonwealth’s case. The jury were entitled to find the following facts in support of the defendant’s incest conviction. The victim, Jane,1 is the defendant’s biological daughter. She was bom in 1985. When she was young, her family lived in Georgia while the defendant was in the Navy. While living in Georgia, when Jane was between ten and twelve years old, the defendant began sexually abusing her. He told Jane that he needed to “correct” her because he was afraid that she was becoming a lesbian and their family did not believe that was right. The abuse began with sexual touching and oral intercourse, and then continued to vaginal intercourse.
When Jane was thirteen or fourteen, the defendant retired from the Navy and moved his family to Wareham, where he continued his sexual abuse of Jane. The abuse occurred once or twice a week, usually vaginal intercourse but sometimes oral penetration as well. Although Jane’s mother was often home during these episodes, she suffered from severe depression and slept a lot. Her mother would occasionally visit Jane’s maternal grandmother in Connecticut, sometimes with Jane’s younger sister. As Jane got older, she often stayed home with the defendant during these trips because she worked. On four or five occasions, the defendant brought Jane to a hotel in Middleboro, where he would perpetrate his incestuous conduct.
When Jane was fourteen, she began dating Robert Fuller, another high school student. They dated for two years. A few months into their relationship, Jane told Fuller about her father’s sexual abuse, but asked him not to tell anyone. During her relationship with Fuller, Jane asked the defendant to stop sexually abusing her because Fuller wanted to marry her. The defendant agreed, but he also stopped talking to her. When Jane was *854about sixteen or seventeen, she stopped dating Fuller. Upon this occurring, the defendant reinitiated his sexual abuse of Jane. He told Jane that he did not want to stop because he cared for her, that it would hurt him to stop, and that he believed that there was nothing wrong with it.
Jane worked at a nearby nursing home where she met Dustin Harris, an African-American man, who was eight years her senior. Jane began dating Harris without her parents’ knowledge because she thought they would not approve of an interracial relationship. On November 14, 2002, while Jane was at Harris’s home, the defendant arrived. He was not happy. Jane went home with the defendant. When they got home, the defendant took out a gun that he had been carrying, removed the bullets, and put the gun away. He told Jane that he was unhappy with her and that he would tell her mother about Harris. Jane, wanting to convince the defendant not to tell her mother and to make him happy, had sexual intercourse with him.
On November 17, 2002, Jane and the defendant went for a walk on the beach near their home. The defendant was very disappointed in Jane. He did not like that she was dating Harris and he wanted her to stop. He also told her that he did not want to stop having a sexual relationship with her. Jane felt trapped, scared, and did not know what to do. In an attempt to kill herself, Jane went home and took a full bottle of pain pills and one-half of the defendant’s heart medication. She sent a computer instant message to her friend, Shannon Crosby, in which she described her overdose. Jane went to Crosby’s house, where she met Crosby and another friend, Ashley. Ashley’s mother eventually brought Jane home, telling Jane’s parents about the overdose. A few weeks before the November 17 suicide attempt, Jane had told Crosby that “something . . . was going on with her father.” Crosby reported Jane’s disclosure to the police on November 17. Crosby’s report was not made at anyone’s direction, but because she was worried about Jane.
Jane’s parents took her to Tobey Hospital in Wareham on November 17. At the hospital, Jane was given medication that made her vomit. She was then brought to St. Luke’s Hospital in New Bedford. On or after November 17, 2002, Jane disclosed the defendant’s sexual abuse to various hospital staff members. Her hospital records contained handwritten notes (many of *855which were barely legible) of her disclosures, including that the defendant had raped Jane for many years and that there had been long-term incest. The records also showed that Jane told hospital personnel that she had been “doing bad things,” “lying to [her] parents,” and that she was sorry for what she had done. Also at the hospital, after her mother and grandmother tried to convince her that the entire event had been a dream and attempted to get her to agree that she had lied, Jane recanted the allegations because they were being “pretty pushy” and she just wanted them to leave her alone. However, according to her mother and grandmother, Jane said she had lied because the defendant had forbidden her to date Harris. After her hospital stay, Jane had no contact with her mother and grandmother.
The police did not seize any clothing or bedding from Jane’s parents’ home because Jane had told them that she had washed everything because she felt dirty. The defendant denied any sexual relationship or conduct with Jane when he was interviewed by a Department of Children and Families (DCF) social worker. He told the DCF social worker that he believed that Jane had made the allegations because she was upset that he found out that Jane was dating an older man of a different race.
b. The defense. As set out in the defendant’s opening statement, the defense was built around the assertion that Jane, an angry teenager, had manufactured her sexual assault claim at the hospital in revenge for the defendant forbidding her to date Harris (both of which occurred the same day), and that she recanted this allegation at the hospital. In support of this theory, the defense called a police officer who responded to the defendant’s house on the day of the suicide attempt. According to the officer, Jane told him that she took an entire bottle of pain relieving pills and four nitroglycerin tablets because she felt that she had let her mother down and figured that they would be better off without her.
Jane’s mother and grandmother testified that Jane said her allegations against the defendant were lies because of the argument she had with the defendant about Harris. Jane’s mother admitted that she had complete financial dependence on the defendant and had no real employment skills of her own. The defendant testified that he counted the pills in his nitroglycerin *856bottle and none was missing. He denied all the allegations of sexual abuse.
2. Discussion, a. The hospital records. The statute establishing the medical records exception to the hearsay rule, G. L. c. 233, § 79, “is not to be interpreted as rendering admissible all the contents of hospital records.” Bouchie v. Murray, 316 Mass. 524, 528 (1978). Rather, § 79 makes admissible only those portions of records relating to “treatment and medical history.” Commonwealth v. Dwyer, 448 Mass. 122, 136 (2006), quoting from G. L. c. 233, § 79. Conversely, medical records that include statements on the question of liability (or culpability) must be redacted. See Mass. G. Evid. § 803(6)(B) (2010).
Here, it was error for the judge, over the defendant’s objection, to admit the hospital records without redacting handwritten phrases such as, patient “has been raped by her father since age [twelve],” patient “discloses being sexually assaulted by father,” “father admits to this and was placed under arrest,” “incest with father, long term,” and patient was “sexually abused by father.” See Commonwealth v. Dwyer, supra at 137. The error may also be viewed as a violation of the first complaint doctrine outlined in Commonwealth v. King, 445 Mass. 217, 241-248 (2005), cert. denied, 546 U.S. 1216 (2006). See Commonwealth v. Stuckich, 450 Mass. 449, 457 (2008). However, in either case, because the error was not structural, we must review for prejudice.
Because this was a nonconstitutional error, the judgment may stand if we are “sure that the error did not influence the jury, or had but very slight effect.” Kotteakos v. United States, 328 U.S. 750, 764 (1946). Put another way,
“if [we] cannot say, with fair assurance, after pondering all that happened without stripping the erroneous action from the whole, that the judgment was not substantially swayed by the error, it is impossible to conclude that substantial rights were not affected .... [The question is] whether the error itself had substantial influence. If so, or if one is left in grave doubt, the conviction cannot stand.”
Id. at 765. See Commonwealth v. Flebotte, 417 Mass. 348, 352-353 (1994); Commonwealth v. Peruzzi 15 Mass. App. Ct. 437, *857445-446 (1983). Based on my review of the entire record, after pondering all that happened at the trial, and without removing the fact of the improper admission of the unredacted hospital records from the whole proceeding, I can say with fair assurance that the jury were not substantially swayed by the error, which at best, had a slight effect.
I base my view on several factors. First, the defense was built on the premise that the victim concocted the allegations in revenge for the defendant prohibiting her from dating Harris, who was African-American and eight years her senior. From the outset of the case, beginning with his motion in limine to admit certain of the victim’s statements contained in the hospital records,2 and as set out in his opening statement, the defendant planned to use the hospital records to show the victim had recanted the allegations. The defendant specifically sought the admission of a hospital record that was understood to be a recantation, and he told the jury that they would have medical records as further evidence of the victim’s recantation.3 Concluding with this same theme, in his closing argument, the defendant made specific reference to statements in the hospital records,4 to explain why she made the allegations against the defendant. The portions of the records that should have been redacted were the actual allegations made in the hospital that the defendant argued had been recanted by the victim.5 Without them, it would have been difficult for the jury to understand that the recantations *858referenced the same allegations of rape and incest as those at trial. Instead, he would have had to establish the recantation by relying solely on the testimony of the victim’s mother and grandmother, both of whom the jury could have understood to be biased in favor of the defendant because they had pressured the victim into recanting and because the defendant was the sole means of support for the victim’s mother.
Second, I have no concern that the jury thought the improper notations were part of a hospital investigation or a report from the police because the judge specifically told the jury that these were comments made by the victim and no more, and specifically noted they were not the result of an investigation. This directive came in relation to the jury question inquiring as to who had authored the intake form, and the notation of the defendant’s claimed admission. To this notation, the judge told the jury that this information came only from the victim, not from the defendant.6 Indeed, the victim had testified that the defendant admitted to what he was doing, and that he did not want to stop. The curative instruction effectively removed from the jury’s consideration any understanding that the defendant had admitted his crimes to hospital personnel.7 See Commonwealth v. Stokes, 440 Mass. 741, 751 (2004) (“we presume the jury follow the judge’s instructions’’). Relatedly, the jury were never instructed that they could use the hospital records as evidence to assist them in evaluating the victim’s credibility, see Commonwealth v. *859King, supra at 248, because it was not admitted as corroborative complaint evidence.
Third, the defendant was charged with raping his own child. This is, to say the least, a startling allegation. The evidence at trial revealed the defendant to the jury as one who behaved more like a jealous boy friend than a father. His attempted excuses to the victim for his incestuous conduct, first that he was concerned about her sexual orientation and later that he was concerned that she was dating a man of another race, could only have made the evidence of his crime all that more compelling to the jury. As a result, I cannot conclude that the jury would have been further startled, impressed, or influenced, let alone “substantially swayed” by the content of the barely legible notations in the hospital records, which even the majority agrees were not emphasized at trial. In fact, these notations were precisely the same allegations that formed the basis of the indictments in this case, which were read to the entire venire when the defendant was set at the bar to be tried, and again after the jury were seated and sworn. This is precisely the reason the judge provided when she denied the motion for a mistrial. It is also significant that hospital records did not include information outside the scope of these charges. Contrast Commonwealth v. Dwyer, 448 Mass. at 136 (defendant prejudiced by unredacted hospital record that contained statements concerning the victim’s sister, which implied that she, too, might have been abused by the defendant). Rather, the unredacted remarks in the hospital records were entirely cumulative of the indictments, and the very reason why the defendant was on trial. See Commonwealth v. Braley, 449 Mass. 316, 326 (2007) (the improper admission of cumulative evidence does not constitute prejudicial error).8
Fourth, the judge’s charge on the incest indictment was favorable to the defendant. Even though the defendant’s incest was alleged to have occurred between October 22, 2001, and November 14, 2002, the judge instmcted the jury under the old incest *860statute, which restricted the crime to natural sexual intercourse with another in a prohibited line of consanguinity. However, that statute was only applicable to pre-May 1, 2002, allegations. See Commonwealth v. Smith, 431 Mass. 417, 422-424 (2000) (limiting incest to penile-vaginal penetration; other sexual activity excluded by incest statute). The current statute, G. L. c. 272, § 17, as amended by St. 2002, c. 13, would have covered a great deal more of the defendant’s acts9 that occurred between May 1, 2002, and November 14, 2002.
Finally, the jury did acquit the defendant of rape, which is some indication that the unredacted records had but a slight effect.10 See Commonwealth v. Sosnowski, 43 Mass. App. Ct. 367, 372 (1997) (“difficult to find that the admission of the evidence caused prejudice” where defendant was acquitted on two of three indictments). In fact, the many references to “rape” in the records did not serve to corroborate the victim’s credibility impermissibly, or at all because the jury acquitted the defendant of rape. The majority’s view permits the defendant to use the first complaint rule as a shield when he did not achieve complete success. See Commonwealth v. Arana, 453 Mass. 214, 228-229 (2009).
Based on these reasons, when viewed against the backdrop of the entire trial, which includes the improper admission of the unredacted hospital records, I am without grave doubt and can say with fair assurance that the jury were not substantially swayed by the error. To the extent there was any resulting effect on the jury occasioned by the hospital records, it was slight. See Kotteakos v. United States, 328 U.S. at 765.
b. Shannon Crosby. The defendant also claims that Shannon Crosby’s testimony violated the first complaint rule. In light of *861the Supreme Judicial Court’s decisions in Commonwealth v. Arana, supra, and Commonwealth v. Kebreau, 454 Mass. 287 (2009), both decided after the trial in this case, I disagree.11
Prior to trial, the Commonwealth moved in limine that it be permitted to elicit through Crosby, without detail, that a few weeks before the victim’s suicide attempt, the victim told Crosby what had happened and that after the suicide attempt, Crosby went to the police. The purpose of this testimony would be to show that it was Crosby, and not the victim, who initiated the police investigation. The defendant objected and claimed that this was impermissible under the first complaint rule. The judge deferred ruling on the matter until Crosby testified.
At trial, Crosby testified, over the defendant’s objection, that she was worried about the victim, and that a few weeks before her suicide attempt, the victim told her that “something . . . was going on with her father.” On the same day as the victim’s suicide attempt, Crosby went to the police, not at anyone’s direction, but because she was worried about the victim. Thus, as promised, this testimony showed that it was Crosby and not the victim who initiated the police investigation. There were also no details or specification as to what the “something” was that was occurring between the victim and the defendant.
In Commonwealth v. Arana, supra at 224-225, the Commonwealth brought a motion in limine to permit a police officer and the victim’s mother to describe the victim’s demeanor at the police station on the day after the assaults. The Commonwealth maintained that this evidence demonstrated that the victim was reluctant and scared when she reported the assault, which was necessary to bolster the victim’s credibility in the face of the defendant’s accusation that her story was fabricated. The defendant objected to this evidence, and claimed that this was inadmissible additional complaint evidence. Id. at 224. The Supreme Judicial Court disagreed, and held that “the circumstances, and timing, of police involvement in the case was relevant and admissible, not as first complaint, but as an integral piece of the Commonwealth’s response to the defendant’s theory that the complainants and their parents were motivated to pursue these *862charges to support their lawsuit, and the police were complicit in this effort.” Id. at 227.
Here, as stated above, the defense was built around the assertion that the victim was angry and had manufactured her sexual abuse claims at the hospital in revenge for the defendant forbidding her to date Harris (which occurred the same day), and that she recanted this allegation at the hospital. Crosby’s testimony that it was she, and not the victim, who went to the police was necessary to bolster the victim’s credibility in the face of the defendant’s accusation that her story was fabricated. In any event, given how vague Crosby’s testimony was, there is no reason to conclude that the jury would have understood that the “something” that occurred was additional complaint evidence any more than it was further evidence of the discord between the victim and the defendant due to the victim’s relationship with Harris.
Finally, even if Crosby’s testimony could be construed as additional complaint evidence, it would have been admissible. In Commonwealth v. Kebreau, supra at 288-289, the court held that the first complaint doctrine “permits testimony from two first complaint witnesses in circumstances similar to those here, where each witness testifies to disclosures made years apart concerning different periods of time and escalating levels of abuse, which constitute different and more serious criminal acts committed over a lengthy period.”
Here, Fuller testified to the victim’s report of the defendant’s assaults from when she was ten or twelve years old, and which continued until she was fourteen. During the two-year period that the victim dated Fuller, the defendant stopped his incest with the victim. At age sixteen or seventeen, the victim stopped dating Fuller, and the defendant reinitiated his abuse. Crosby’s would-be complaint testimony related to the second period of abuse. Although there were escalating levels of abuse during the years in question, Crosby’s testimony did not reveal any details to assess whether the assaults from the two periods differed. Nonetheless, the disclosures were made years apart, there was no evidence that there was any overlap in the reports, and there was no “piling on,” the primary vice in sexual assault prosecutions that led to the creation of the first complaint rule. See Commonwealth v. King, supra at 235, 245. At bottom, whether *863Crosby’s testimony is viewed through an Arana, supra, or Kebreau, supra, lens, there was no error.
I respectfully dissent.
A pseudonym.
When the defendant discussed the motion in limine with the judge, he argued that the victim’s statements at the hospital, along the lines of “I’m very sorry for what I’ve done. I don’t know what I’m doing,” reflected the state of mind of someone who had made a false allegation.
In his opening statement, the defendant told the jury that, “[i]n addition to the recanting through the [victim], you will have other information in the medical records that you will be able to look at. Statements that are also reflective of a state of mind of someone who has made a false allegation. Something like, I don’t know what I am doing. Or, I feel bad about what I have done. I don’t know what I am doing.”
The records contain the victim’s statements to hospital personnel that she had been “doing bad things,” “lying to [her] parents,” and that she was sorry for what she had done.
Contrary to the majority’s view, I do not maintain that “the defendant’s desire to have recantation evidence admitted precludes his objection to other inadmissible portions of the hospital records.” See ante at note 7. Also contrary to the majority opinion, I do not suggest that “the defendant intended to use the allegations appearing in the hospital records to support his challenge *858to [the victim]’s credibility based on recantation.” See ante at note 9. Rather, as I note from the very beginning of this dissent, I agree with the majority’s finding of error. Instead, my view is that the defendant was not prejudiced by the unredacted remarks in the records.
The majority’s belief that the jury’s question regarding the intake form indicates that the jury “focused” their attention on this record entry is purely speculative. See ante at 851. We cannot fairly say the jury “focused” on this topic, any more than we can say they were not focused on the three other questions they asked (on topics such as the victim’s diary, the purpose of a medication, and the whereabouts of a police report), or on any question at all.
Beyond mentioning the fact of the curative instruction, the majority opinion does not discuss (or deny) its mitigating effect. The majority opinion does correctly note that the judge told counsel that she would not instruct the jury that the defendant did not admit the allegations because the judge believed that was a jury question. Importantly, the majority opinion does not make it clear that the judge did not instruct the jury that whether the defendant admitted the allegations was an issue of fact for them to resolve.
It is also my view that the unredacted records did not have any effect whatsoever on the inconceivable if not fatuous defense theory that the nearly emancipated seventeen year old victim would attempt suicide and falsely accuse her father of raping her because he did not approve of whom she wished to date. My view is further supported by the fact, as set forth in part 2. b., infra, that it was Shannon Crosby, not the victim, who brought the circumstances of this case to the attention of the police.
In addition to punishing sexual intercourse with another within a prohibited line of consanguinity, the current version of G. L. c. 272, § 17, also applies to those “who engage in sexual activities with each other, including but not limited to, oral or anal intercourse, fellatio, cunnilingus, or other penetration of a part of a person’s body, or insertion of an object into the genital or anal opening of another person’s body, or the manual manipulation of the genitalia of another person’s body.”
Coupled with this is the fact that the incest indictment alleged that the offense occurred when the victim was between sixteen and seventeen years old, whereas the rape indictment covered a greater range, when the victim was between twelve and fifteen years old.
The majority does not reach this issue, and leaves it for resolution at a retrial should there be one.