In North Carolina, an emergency-room visit often results in more than one bill because the hospital typically bills a “facility” charge and the emergency physician (or physician group) bills a separate “professional” charge. The most reliable way to confirm what should exist is to request an itemized hospital statement and compare it to the insurer’s Explanation of Benefits (EOB) for the same date of service. If the provider says everything processed through health coverage and the account is at a zero balance, you still may need the EOBs and itemized statements to confirm whether any separate professional bills were issued or paid under a different billing entity.
If you were treated in a North Carolina emergency room and you want to know whether you will get separate bills (one from the hospital and one from the emergency physician), the key question is whether the physician services were billed under a different billing entity than the hospital for that same visit, especially where the account is showing a zero balance.
North Carolina law does not require emergency-room care to be billed on a single combined statement. In practice, ER billing is commonly split between (1) the hospital’s charges for using the emergency department (often called the “facility” component) and (2) the clinician’s charges for medical decision-making and treatment (often called the “professional” component). Because these can be billed by different entities, a “paid/zero balance” hospital account does not always prove that every related professional charge was billed, processed, or documented.
What North Carolina law does clearly provide is a patient’s right to request an itemized list of hospital charges and a way to inquire about or dispute a hospital bill. That itemized statement helps you confirm what the hospital billed (and what it did not bill). To confirm physician billing, you typically need the insurer’s EOBs and, if necessary, a separate itemized statement from the emergency physician’s billing entity.
Apply the Rule to the Facts: Here, the provider reports that the hospital and any physician-related billing for the ER date of service were processed through health coverage and the account shows a zero balance. Even so, because ER billing is often split between facility and professional charges, the safest way to confirm nothing is missing is to (1) obtain an itemized hospital statement for that date and (2) obtain the insurer EOB(s) showing whether separate facility and professional claims were submitted and paid.
In North Carolina, an ER visit commonly produces separate billing for the hospital (facility charges) and the emergency physician (professional charges). To confirm whether separate bills exist and whether anything is missing, request the hospital’s itemized statement for the date of service and compare it to the insurer’s EOBs for that same visit. As a next step, request the hospital itemization from the billing office within three years after discharge.
If you're dealing with emergency-room billing questions that affect a personal injury claim, our firm has experienced attorneys who can help you understand what documents to request, how to read EOBs versus statements, and what timelines to watch. 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.