Yes. In North Carolina, an injury claim can include compensation for mental health treatment (like therapy) and for the impact PTSD symptoms have on your life, as long as you can connect the condition and the need for treatment to the incident and support it with medical evidence. You can also seek future treatment costs if your provider indicates additional care is reasonably likely to be needed. The strength of this part of the claim usually depends on documentation, consistency of treatment, and clear provider opinions about diagnosis, causation, and prognosis.
In North Carolina, can an injured person include ongoing PTSD therapy and continuing PTSD symptoms in a personal injury claim when they are still treating and have an upcoming appointment where the provider may reevaluate whether more treatment is needed?
North Carolina personal injury damages generally aim to compensate an injured person for losses caused by the incident. That can include (1) economic losses like medical expenses (including counseling/therapy) and (2) noneconomic losses like pain, suffering, and emotional distress. For PTSD-related damages, the key legal issue is proof: you must show the PTSD symptoms and the therapy are tied to the incident (causation) and that the treatment is reasonably necessary. Future therapy can be claimed when the evidence supports that additional treatment is reasonably likely, not just possible.
Apply the Rule to the Facts: Because you are still receiving PTSD treatment and your provider is planning to reevaluate whether additional treatment is needed, your claim can include (1) the therapy you have already received and (2) the ongoing symptoms you continue to experience. The “future therapy” portion is usually strongest when the provider documents that continued treatment is reasonably likely and explains why (for example, persistent symptoms or a structured treatment plan). Your records and provider opinions will matter most for connecting the PTSD and therapy to the incident and showing the treatment is reasonably necessary.
Yes—North Carolina injury claims can include compensation for ongoing PTSD therapy, related medical expenses, and the day-to-day impact of PTSD symptoms, as long as the evidence ties the condition and the treatment to the incident and shows the care is reasonably necessary. Future therapy is typically recoverable when your provider supports that additional treatment is reasonably likely. Next step: ask your provider at the upcoming appointment to document diagnosis, causation, and whether continued treatment is recommended, and gather your billing records promptly.
If you're dealing with ongoing PTSD symptoms and continued therapy after an injury, an attorney can help you organize the medical proof, document future treatment needs, and present these damages clearly in a claim or lawsuit. 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.