In North Carolina, a settlement for injuries that required imaging (like CT scans), staples, and follow-up therapy is usually based on (1) provable financial losses (medical bills and related out-of-pocket costs, and sometimes lost income) plus (2) non-economic harms like pain, suffering, and disruption to daily life. There is no fixed “multiplier” or formula required by North Carolina law. The value also depends heavily on whether the other driver is clearly at fault and whether any medical liens or insurance reimbursement claims must be paid from the settlement.
If you were hurt in a North Carolina car wreck and you needed emergency care like scans and staples, plus follow-up physical therapy, the practical question is: how do you turn those medical events into a fair settlement number that covers what you paid (or still owe) and also accounts for what you went through? Here, one key fact is that you were transported by EMS to the emergency room after a head injury with loss of consciousness.
North Carolina personal injury settlements are meant to compensate an injured person for damages caused by someone else’s negligence. In a typical motor vehicle injury claim, the core categories are (1) economic damages (medical expenses and other measurable losses) and (2) non-economic damages (pain and suffering and related impacts). A settlement is not “calculated” by a statute-based equation; it is negotiated based on what you can prove, what a jury could reasonably award, and the practical risks on both sides (including defenses like contributory negligence). Medical billing issues also matter because health insurance, provider billing, and medical liens can affect what must be repaid out of the settlement.
Apply the Rule to the Facts: Your ER transport after a head injury with reported loss of consciousness supports that the initial evaluation and imaging were medically reasonable and tied to the crash, which helps prove both causation and damages. Staples (or stitches) and follow-up therapy also tend to create a clear paper trail of treatment and recovery time. The settlement value will usually track (1) the total, well-documented medical charges and out-of-pocket costs, (2) how long symptoms lasted and whether you fully recovered, and (3) whether the insurer can credibly argue you were at fault in any way.
In North Carolina, a settlement for injuries involving scans, staples, and follow-up therapy is negotiated based on provable economic losses (medical bills and out-of-pocket costs) plus non-economic harms (pain and disruption), with liability and medical causation driving the result. There is no required formula, and defenses like contributory negligence can change the outcome. A practical next step is to gather your itemized EMS/ER/imaging and therapy records and use them to make a written demand to the at-fault insurer before you sign any release.
If you're dealing with a North Carolina car wreck injury that involved emergency scans, staples, and follow-up therapy, an attorney can help you organize the medical proof, evaluate lien and reimbursement issues, and understand how liability defenses may affect settlement value and timing. 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.