Can I do anything to speed up the collection of my medical records?: Practical steps under North Carolina personal injury law
Can I do anything to speed up the collection of my medical records? - North Carolina
Short Answer
Yes. In North Carolina, you can make a direct “patient right of access” request to your provider’s medical records department and ask for electronic delivery to you and your attorney. Providers generally must respond within 30 days and may charge reasonable copy fees. If a lawsuit is filed, your attorney can also use a subpoena to set a firm compliance date.
Understanding the Problem
You want to know whether you can help move faster in North Carolina to get medical records for your personal injury claim. The key decision is whether you, as the patient, can act now to request your records and reduce delays. Here, your attorney is waiting on records from one treatment provider.
Apply the Law
North Carolina law allows patients to obtain copies of their medical records, and federal privacy rules give patients a direct right to access those records. The primary forum for pre‑suit records is the provider’s medical records or Health Information Management office; once a lawsuit is filed, records can also be compelled by subpoena through the Clerk of Superior Court. A core timing rule is that providers must respond to a patient’s direct access request within 30 days, with a limited extension available if they give written notice.
Key Requirements
Make a valid request: Submit a written patient right‑of‑access request that clearly identifies you, the date range, and where to send records (ask for secure electronic delivery to you and your attorney).
Authorization/identity: Sign the request and include any ID the provider requires; if a representative signs, include proof of authority.
30‑day response window: Providers generally must provide access within 30 days; they may take one extra 30 days if they send a written reason and a new date.
Copying fees: North Carolina permits reasonable, cost‑based fees for copies; confirm and pay promptly to avoid holds.
Subpoena after filing suit: If your case is filed in court, your attorney can issue a subpoena for records under Rule 45 with a set compliance date.
Special records: Psychotherapy notes, certain substance‑use treatment records, and imaging films can require extra steps or separate requests.
Apply the Rule to the Facts: Because your attorney is waiting on a provider’s report, you can submit your own right‑of‑access request to that provider asking for your treatment records and itemized bills for the accident‑related dates, with secure electronic delivery to you and your attorney. This triggers the 30‑day response clock and can run in parallel with your attorney’s request. If the case is filed later, your attorney can use a subpoena to set a firm compliance date.
Process & Timing
Who files: You (the patient). Where: The provider’s Medical Records/Health Information Management office in North Carolina. What: A written “patient right of access” request identifying your name/DOB, accident‑related date range, and delivery to you and your attorney (secure email/portal). Include your signature and any required ID. When: The provider generally must respond within 30 days of receiving your request; they may take one additional 30 days with written notice.
Follow up after 10–14 days to confirm receipt, scope, fees, and delivery method. If imaging is involved, send a separate request to the radiology group for images and reports.
If suit is filed: Your attorney may issue a subpoena duces tecum under Rule 45 through the Clerk of Superior Court in the county where the case is pending, setting a reasonable compliance date. The expected outcome is production of certified records to counsel.
Exceptions & Pitfalls
“Report” vs. “records”: Narrative medical reports take longer. Ask for treatment records and itemized bills now; your attorney can request a narrative later.
Scope too broad: Narrow the date range to accident‑related care to avoid delays and excess fees.
Separate custodians: Imaging, therapy, and hospital records may be held by different entities; send requests to each custodian.
Authorization issues: Missing signatures, wrong dates of birth, or unsigned forms cause rejections. Double‑check details before sending.
Special protections: Psychotherapy notes and certain substance‑use treatment records have added restrictions; expect extra steps or partial redactions.
Unpaid copy fees: Providers may pause release until fees are addressed; confirm charges early and pay promptly.
Conclusion
In North Carolina, you can help speed up medical record collection by sending a clear, signed patient right‑of‑access request to the provider’s records department and asking for secure electronic delivery to you and your attorney. Providers generally must respond within 30 days and may charge reasonable copy fees. Next step: submit your written request today and follow up if you do not receive records or a written extension within 30 days.
Talk to a Personal Injury Attorney
If you’re dealing with delays getting your North Carolina medical records for an injury claim, our firm can help you understand your options and timelines. Reach out today. Call (919) 341-7055 or email intake@piercelaw.com.
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.