Where This Fits in the Claim Process
When an insurance company keeps reassigning adjusters or stops returning calls, you are usually stuck in the “investigation” stage—before the insurer is ready to discuss settlement. The adjuster may be gathering records, verifying coverage, reviewing the crash report, or waiting on medical documentation. Sometimes it is simply poor claim handling. Either way, your goal is to force clarity: who is handling the file, what they still need, and when you should expect a response.
Practical Steps That Usually Help
- Control the communication: Send one short email or letter that (a) identifies the claim, (b) asks for the current adjuster’s name and direct contact information, and (c) requests a written status update. If you do not have email, send it by certified mail and keep the receipt.
- Make your request specific: Instead of “call me,” ask for specific items, such as: confirmation the insurer received your documents, whether liability is accepted or still under review, and a list of any missing information they claim they need.
- Set a reasonable response deadline: Give a short, practical deadline (for example, “please respond in writing within 10 business days”). If they miss it, follow up once in writing and note the prior attempts.
- Protect the record: Keep a simple log of every call, voicemail, email, and letter (date/time, who you tried to reach, and what you asked for). Save screenshots or PDFs of emails and attachments.
- Send meaningful updates promptly: If you have new medical bills, visit summaries, work notes, or proof of missed work, send them as you receive them. In practice, each new packet of documentation often becomes a new “starting point” for measuring whether the insurer is delaying without a good reason.
- Escalation options: If the adjuster is unresponsive, request the supervisor or claims manager in writing. Keep the tone professional and stick to facts.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Giving a rushed recorded statement: If you feel pressured to give a recorded statement “right now,” it is reasonable to ask what topics will be covered and to schedule a time when you can be calm and accurate. Inconsistent details can hurt a claim later.
- Over-explaining or guessing: If you do not know an answer (for example, exact speeds or distances), do not guess. Stick to what you know.
- Letting documentation gaps grow: Long gaps in treatment or missing records can create arguments about whether the crash caused your symptoms. This is not medical advice, but from a claim standpoint, consistent documentation matters.
- Waiting too long to protect deadlines: A lack of response does not stop the legal clock. For most North Carolina personal injury cases, the lawsuit deadline is generally three years from the date of injury. See N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1-52.
How This Applies
Apply to the facts: With an ER visit, imaging, follow-up care, and physical therapy for neck and back pain, the insurer will typically want a clear treatment timeline and supporting records before it meaningfully evaluates the injury portion of the claim. If the file keeps moving to new adjusters, sending a concise written status request (plus a clean packet of the records and bills you already have) can reduce the “we’re still waiting on information” excuse. Because you also report intoxication, it is especially important to keep communications factual and consistent and to preserve any documents you have that support how the crash happened.
Conclusion
If the other driver’s insurance company keeps changing adjusters and will not call you back, the most effective move is usually to create a clear written paper trail: identify the current handler, request a written status update, and send organized documentation as it becomes available. Keep your communications short and factual, and do not let silence cause you to miss a filing deadline. One practical next step is to gather your key documents into a single packet and send a written status request with a reasonable response deadline.