In North Carolina, you do not have to give the at-fault insurer a blanket, open-ended release for all your records. Share only accident-related medical records and bills, and verify wage loss with pay stubs and a short employer letter. If you use a HIPAA authorization, limit it by provider, date range, and body parts, and set an expiration. Keep the three-year lawsuit deadline for personal injury in mind if settlement talks stall.
You want to know whether you can—or must—give the at-fault insurer your medical and job information after a North Carolina accident, and how to do it safely. The insurer is asking for medical authorizations and wage details; you are on light duty and missed some wages. This question focuses on what to provide, how to control privacy, and what timing matters under North Carolina personal injury law.
Under North Carolina law, you control your protected health information and employment records. Insurers commonly ask for broad authorizations, but you can provide what is reasonably necessary to evaluate your claim without giving full access to unrelated history. If a lawsuit becomes necessary, the General Court of Justice (District or Superior Court, depending on the claim size) is the forum, and the core timing rule is the personal injury statute of limitations—generally three years from the accident.
Apply the Rule to the Facts: Your accident-related care includes EMS transport, an ER visit with imaging, ongoing PT, and treatment by an orthopedic doctor with an MRI pending. Provide those records and bills, but do not authorize unrelated, years-old medical history. For wage loss while on light duty, give the adjuster recent pay stubs and a short employer note confirming dates missed or reduced hours. Use a narrowly tailored HIPAA release limited to these providers and dates so the insurer gets what it needs—no more.
In North Carolina, you may answer an insurer’s request by providing only accident-related medical records and bills plus objective wage proof, without signing a blanket release. Control scope through a limited HIPAA authorization by provider, dates, and body parts, and keep copies of everything you send. Next step: send a narrowly tailored, time-limited HIPAA release and the specific wage documents, while calendaring the three-year lawsuit deadline.
If you’re dealing with insurer requests for medical and employment records after a crash, our firm has experienced attorneys who can help you understand your options and timelines. Reach out today at (919) 341-7055.
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.