In North Carolina, most medical malpractice lawsuits must be filed within three years of the health care provider’s last act or omission. If you discovered the injury later, you may have up to one year from discovery, but there is a hard four-year cutoff from the provider’s last act (the statute of repose). A narrow foreign-object exception can extend discovery time. You must also meet North Carolina’s Rule 9(j) pre-filing certification before you sue.
You want to know how long a patient in North Carolina has to file a medical malpractice lawsuit after developing an infection. Here, the patient alleges a doctor at a medical facility did not wash hands or wear gloves before touching the patient, and a persistent infection followed. The core issue is the filing deadline for a malpractice claim in North Carolina courts.
North Carolina sets two key clocks in medical malpractice cases: a statute of limitations (generally three years) and a statute of repose (generally four years from the provider’s last act or omission). A limited “discovery rule” can give up to one year from when the injury was or should have been discovered, but the four-year repose typically caps the claim. North Carolina also requires a Rule 9(j) certification—before filing, a qualified medical professional must review the care and be willing to testify that it fell below the standard of care.
Apply the Rule to the Facts: The alleged last act is the doctor’s ungloved, unwashed contact at the medical facility. The infection became apparent and has persisted for about a month, so the three-year statute of limitations from the last act likely controls, and the four-year repose is not immediately at issue. Because this is a medical malpractice claim, you must obtain a Rule 9(j) certification before filing—or seek a timely 120-day extension to secure it.
For an infection claim based on alleged medical negligence in North Carolina, file suit within three years of the provider’s last act or omission, and no later than four years from that act, with a narrow exception for foreign objects. Because North Carolina requires a Rule 9(j) expert review before filing, start early. Next step: obtain your records, secure a qualified medical review, and, if needed, file a Rule 9(j) extension request before the three-year deadline.
If you're dealing with a post-treatment infection and need to understand North Carolina’s deadlines and Rule 9(j) requirements, our firm can help you map the timeline and protect your rights. Contact us today to discuss your options.
Disclaimer: This article provides general information about North Carolina law based on the single question stated above. It is not legal advice for your specific situation and does not create an attorney-client relationship. Laws, procedures, and local practice can change and may vary by county. If you have a deadline, act promptly and speak with a licensed North Carolina attorney.