In most North Carolina injury cases, your treatment is “complete” when your treating medical provider has finished active care and either (1) releases you from care, or (2) says you have reached a stable point where more treatment is not expected to materially improve your condition (often called “maximum medical improvement”). Even then, you may still have follow-up care, maintenance care, or future treatment needs. The practical goal is to know your final diagnosis, restrictions, prognosis, and expected future care before you resolve the claim.
If you are pursuing a North Carolina personal injury claim and you are still seeing providers, a key question is: has your doctor finished active treatment for this injury so your case can be evaluated and possibly resolved? In your situation, one important fact is that you are currently receiving treatment related to the injury claim, and your law firm is checking whether you are done treating.
North Carolina personal injury law generally allows an injured person to seek compensation for reasonable medical expenses caused by the incident, along with other damages. Because medical damages often depend on what care you needed (and may still need), lawyers and insurance adjusters usually look for a clear medical “end point” before valuing the claim. That end point is commonly shown by a discharge from care, a final visit note, or a provider’s statement that you have reached a stable condition where additional treatment is not expected to significantly change the outcome (often referred to as maximum medical improvement).
Separately, North Carolina law also recognizes that medical bills related to an injury can create lien issues that must be addressed when a case resolves, which is another reason your firm asks for a treatment update and collects final records and billing.
Apply the Rule to the Facts: Because you are still receiving treatment, your case may not yet have the clean “end point” insurers often want to see (like a discharge note or a statement that you have reached a stable condition). Your firm’s request that you provide a treatment update by phone or text is a practical step to confirm whether you are still in active care, whether you have upcoming appointments, and whether your provider has discussed a release from care or a stable long-term plan. Once treatment is complete (or stable), your firm can more confidently gather final records and bills and evaluate whether future care needs should be included in the claim.
In North Carolina injury cases, medical treatment is usually considered “complete” when your provider ends active care and releases you from treatment or states you have reached a stable point where more treatment is not expected to materially improve your condition. That status matters because it helps lock in your diagnosis, restrictions, prognosis, and any future care plan before settlement talks. Next step: send your attorney a treatment update (last visit, next visit, and whether you were discharged) so the firm can request the right final records and bills.
If you’re dealing with an injury claim and you’re not sure whether you’re done treating (or whether you should wait for a final evaluation), our firm has experienced attorneys who can help you understand your options and timelines. Reach out today. Call [CONTACT NUMBER].
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.