What happens if I keep getting new medical bills while my treatment is still ongoing?

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What happens if I keep getting new medical bills while my treatment is still ongoing? - North Carolina

Short Answer

In North Carolina, it is normal to keep receiving new medical bills while you are still treating, and those bills can usually be added to your injury claim as they come in. The practical key is to keep your lawyer updated so the claim file stays current and so any medical-provider liens or repayment issues can be handled before settlement money is distributed. You should also keep treating as recommended and avoid letting bills go unanswered, even if the claim is still pending.

Understanding the Problem

If you are injured in North Carolina and still treating, can you keep sending your lawyer new bills as they arrive so they can be included in your claim, especially when you receive an additional hospital bill after you moved?

Apply the Law

Under North Carolina law, medical expenses are part of the “damages” a person can seek in a personal injury claim, but you still have to prove the charges are tied to the injury and are reasonable. As treatment continues, new bills often arrive later (for example, separate billing for the facility, imaging, or a specialist). Also, North Carolina allows certain medical providers to assert a lien against any settlement or judgment proceeds for treatment related to the injury, which is one reason your lawyer needs every new bill and updated account information before the case resolves.

Key Requirements

  • Document the charges: Keep copies of each bill and any statements showing what was paid, what insurance adjusted, and what balance (if any) remains.
  • Connect the bill to the injury: The claim still needs proof that the services were for the accident-related condition, not an unrelated issue.
  • Show the amount is reasonable: North Carolina has rules that help establish reasonableness when the proper billing records accompany testimony, but the other side can still challenge amounts.
  • Watch for medical-provider liens: Providers who treated you for the injury may claim a lien on settlement/judgment funds, and your lawyer may have duties to address valid liens before disbursing proceeds.
  • Keep your contact info current: If you move, billing delays and missed notices are common; updating addresses reduces the risk of collections activity while the claim is pending.

What the Statutes Say

Analysis

Apply the Rule to the Facts: Because you are still receiving treatment and you received an additional hospital bill after moving, the bill is not unusual and it can typically be added to your claim file as another item of medical expense. Your lawyer will want the bill (and any related explanation of benefits or account statement) to help document the amount and to track whether the provider may later assert a lien against any settlement. Since you report ongoing symptoms and medication use, continued billing may also reflect ongoing care, which makes it even more important to keep the documentation organized and current.

Process & Timing

  1. Who sends it: The injured person (or a family member helping). Where: Your attorney’s office handling the North Carolina injury claim. What: A copy of the bill, plus any insurance explanation of benefits (EOB) or account statement showing what is “paid,” “adjusted,” and “patient responsibility.” When: As soon as you receive it, especially before any settlement discussions get serious.
  2. Next step: The attorney’s office typically logs the bill, requests supporting records if needed, and updates the running total of medical expenses. If the bill looks unrelated, duplicated, or incorrectly addressed after your move, the office may ask you for clarification or request an itemized statement from the provider.
  3. Final step: Before any settlement funds are disbursed, the attorney’s office typically confirms outstanding balances and checks for any lien notices from providers so the settlement distribution can be handled correctly under North Carolina law.

Exceptions & Pitfalls

  • If a bill is for treatment that is not related to the injury (or the records do not clearly connect it), the insurer/defense may dispute including it in the claim.
  • If you moved and the provider billed the wrong address, you can miss important notices; that can lead to collections activity even while your injury claim is ongoing.
  • If you settle before all bills are identified, you can end up with “surprise” balances later; this is why ongoing bill tracking and lien checks matter.
  • If a provider asserts a valid lien, settlement funds may need to be held back to address that claim, even if you would prefer immediate distribution.

Conclusion

In North Carolina, new medical bills commonly keep arriving while treatment is ongoing, and they can usually be added to your personal injury claim as long as you can document the charges and tie them to the injury. Because medical providers may assert liens against any recovery, your file needs to stay updated so liens and balances can be handled before settlement proceeds are disbursed. Next step: send each new bill (and any EOB/account statement) to your attorney as soon as you receive it.

Talk to a Personal Injury Attorney

If you're dealing with ongoing treatment and new medical bills that keep showing up, our firm has experienced attorneys who can help you understand how those bills fit into a North Carolina injury claim and what timelines and paperwork matter. Reach out today.

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.

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