Why Treatment Timing and Documentation Matter
With whiplash-type injuries, the dispute is often not whether a crash happened, but whether the crash caused your current symptoms (or worsened an older neck problem). When you have a prior disc issue, the claim usually turns on separating: (1) what you were dealing with before the collision, from (2) what changed after the collision.
North Carolina law generally allows recovery when a crash activates a previously quiet condition or aggravates an existing condition. But the other side can argue your pain is from your underlying condition, normal wear-and-tear, or something unrelated. That is why the “paper trail” (medical notes, symptom history, and timing) becomes so important.
Common Scenarios and What They Often Mean
- “I had a bad neck before, but it was manageable”: This can still support a claim if you can show a clear change after the crash—new symptoms, higher pain levels, reduced range of motion, new work restrictions, or new treatment needs.
- ER-only care or no early care: Insurers often treat limited follow-up as a sign the injury was minor or unrelated. That does not end the claim, but it can make causation harder to prove without consistent documentation.
- Gaps in care: A gap (even for understandable reasons) can raise questions like “Did something else cause this?” or “Did it really persist?” Clear notes about when symptoms started, how they changed, and why care was delayed can help.
- “My MRI shows disc problems”: Imaging often shows degenerative findings in many adults, even without a recent crash. The issue becomes whether the collision caused a new injury, made a prior disc problem symptomatic, or increased the severity of an existing condition.
Practical Documentation Tips (Non‑Medical)
- Write down a simple before-and-after summary: What symptoms you had before the crash (if any), what changed after, and when you first noticed the change.
- Track dates and functional limits: Missed activities, sleep disruption, driving limitations, lifting limits, or household tasks you can’t do the same way.
- Be consistent: Inconsistencies between what you tell an adjuster and what appears in medical notes can be used to challenge credibility.
- Keep paperwork: Visit summaries, work notes (if any), and bills. If Medicaid pays for some care, that can also create reimbursement issues later that need to be handled as part of the claim.
How This Applies
Apply to your facts: Because you report ongoing neck pain that aggravated pre-existing disc issues and you have not yet seen a doctor, the biggest risk is that the insurer argues your symptoms are just your prior condition or that the delay means the crash didn’t cause the problem. The most helpful next documentation step is creating a clear timeline (crash date, symptom onset, day-to-day changes, and why care was delayed) so your medical records—when you do seek care—accurately reflect what changed after the collision.
What the Statutes Say (Optional)
- N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1-52 – Sets a three-year limitations period for many personal injury actions.
- N.C. Gen. Stat. § 108A-57 – Describes North Carolina Medicaid’s subrogation/reimbursement rights that can affect how a settlement is handled.
Conclusion
Pre-existing neck or disc problems do not automatically defeat a whiplash claim in Durham or elsewhere in North Carolina. The focus is on proving what the crash changed—whether it caused a new injury, activated a dormant problem, or made an existing condition worse. The single most helpful next step is to document a clear symptom timeline and get your records organized so your claim reflects the difference between “before the crash” and “after the crash.”