Why Treatment Timing and Documentation Matter
When you’re still treating, the insurance company does not yet know (and you may not know) what your final outcome will be. In a claim, that uncertainty matters because your medical records are usually the main way to show (a) what injuries you suffered, (b) how the incident affected your daily life and work, and (c) what future care or limitations may be involved.
In practice, many claims are evaluated more reliably when your condition has stabilized and your providers can describe your prognosis in clear terms. If there are questions about whether symptoms are related to the incident, a focused written medical opinion from a treating provider can sometimes help clarify causation and future expectations.
Common Scenarios and What They Often Mean
- Still treating after a serious injury (like surgery): It’s normal for the claim value to be hard to pin down until follow-up visits show how healing is progressing, what function returns, and whether additional procedures or therapy may be needed.
- Gaps in care: Insurance adjusters often question gaps. If there is a gap for a practical reason (scheduling, referral delays, transportation, work constraints), documentation helps show it wasn’t because you “got better” or the injury was unrelated.
- “Done with treatment” / plan changes: If your plan changes from conservative care to surgery (or from surgery to extended rehab), your damages picture can change quickly. It helps to keep the insurer updated with new records as they come in so the claim evaluation keeps pace with the reality of your recovery.
Practical Documentation Tips (Non‑Medical)
- Keep a simple timeline: appointment dates, procedures (in plain terms), work restrictions (if any), and major functional limits (e.g., lifting, gripping, driving).
- Save key paperwork: visit summaries, operative reports if surgery occurred, therapy notes, and itemized bills you receive.
- Supplement the claim as you go: Don’t let months of new records and bills pile up without sending updates. Regular, organized supplementation helps prevent the insurer from claiming it lacked information to reevaluate the claim.
- Be consistent: Describe symptoms and limitations the same way across forms, emails, and conversations. Avoid guessing about medical conclusions or minimizing/overstating what you feel.
How This Applies
Apply to these facts: As a passenger with a broken elbow requiring surgery and additional shoulder/hand issues in the same arm, it’s reasonable that your prognosis is still developing. While you continue orthopedic and trauma care, the safest approach is usually to keep the claim open, provide periodic record/bill updates, and avoid signing anything that would end the claim before your providers can document your long-term function, restrictions, and any future care needs.
What the Statutes Say (Optional)
- N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1-52 (Three-year limitations period) – sets a three-year deadline for many injury-related civil actions.
- N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1-139 (Contributory negligence burden) – places the burden of proving contributory negligence on the party asserting it.
Conclusion
You don’t have to wait for a final prognosis to start (or continue) an insurance claim in Durham, but you should treat an early settlement as a serious decision because it can close the door on later complications. While you’re still treating, keep your documentation organized, send periodic updates, and protect yourself from rushed statements or paperwork that doesn’t match your medical reality. One practical next step is to speak with a licensed North Carolina attorney to map your treatment timeline against the claim process and deadlines.