In North Carolina, if your health insurance stops covering treatment while your personal injury claim is still pending, you generally still have to keep up with medically necessary care—but you may need a different payment plan (like self-pay arrangements) until the case resolves. Unpaid medical bills can turn into medical liens that may have to be addressed out of any settlement funds. Your lawyer can often help you coordinate coverage options, negotiate billing, and plan for lien resolution so your case can still move forward.
If you have a North Carolina injury claim in settlement discussions and your health insurance coverage changes, you may be asking what you can do when ongoing back-related visits and medications are no longer covered while the case is still open. This situation usually turns into a practical question about how to keep treating and how the unpaid balance will be handled if the claim later settles.
North Carolina law recognizes that medical providers may have rights against the proceeds of a personal injury recovery for treatment related to the injury. Even when your health insurance stops paying, you can still treat, but the financial responsibility may shift to you (at least temporarily) unless another payer applies. If a settlement or judgment happens later, certain medical bills may attach as liens to the recovery, and your attorney generally must address valid lien notices before disbursing funds.
Separately, timing matters because personal injury cases have filing deadlines. In many negligence-based injury cases, the general statute of limitations is three years, and waiting too long can put your ability to recover at risk even if you are still treating.
Apply the Rule to the Facts: Here, your health insurance changed and stopped covering ongoing visits and medications for a worsening back condition while settlement talks are underway. That usually means the treatment can continue, but the bills may shift to self-pay or another arrangement, and any unpaid balances may later be asserted as lien claims against the settlement proceeds. Because you are represented, your attorney can track which providers are asserting liens, request itemized statements/records, and plan for lien resolution so settlement distribution does not get delayed.
If your health insurance stops covering treatment while your North Carolina injury case is pending, you can usually still continue medically necessary care, but you may need to switch to self-pay or another arrangement and plan for how the bills will be handled at settlement. Unpaid medical charges can become lien claims that must be addressed from any recovery. The most important next step is to have your attorney confirm the case’s filing deadline and, if needed, file the lawsuit in the proper North Carolina court before the three-year limit runs.
If you’re dealing with treatment that is no longer covered while your injury claim is still pending, our firm has experienced attorneys who can help you understand your options, coordinate lien issues, and protect your 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.