What happens if I never received the intake packet that was supposed to be mailed to me? — Durham, NC

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What happens if I never received the intake packet that was supposed to be mailed to me? — Durham, NC

Short Answer

Usually, nothing “bad” happens—you simply are not fully onboarded yet, so the firm may not be able to start requesting medical bills and records or moving the claim forward. The fix is typically to confirm your contact details and have the packet resent by email, mail, or secure e-signature. Until the firm has signed intake forms and medical releases, there are limits on what it can do quickly and efficiently.

What This Question Usually Means

In a North Carolina personal injury case, an “intake packet” is usually the paperwork a firm needs to (1) confirm who you are and how to reach you, (2) check for conflicts, (3) document key facts, and (4) get your written permission to request records and bills. If you never received it, the most common issue is a mailing or address problem—not a problem with your case.

Practically, the biggest impact is delay. Without signed forms (especially medical authorizations), the firm often cannot efficiently gather the records and itemized billing needed to document your injuries and expenses.

What to Gather for a Case Review

  • Basics of the incident: The date (or date range), the general location (Durham/nearby county), and a short description of what happened.
  • Injury/treatment overview: The types of providers you saw (for example, ER, urgent care, primary care, therapy) and whether you are still treating.
  • Insurance/claim info (if available): Any claim number, adjuster contact information, and which vehicles/parties were involved (high-level only).
  • Documents: Photos, any incident exchange information you have, and any records/bills you already received (even if incomplete). If you missed work, any basic wage loss proof you can access.

What Happens After the First Call

  1. Initial screening: The firm confirms contact information, runs a conflicts check, and makes sure it understands the general issue you’re calling about.
  2. Document review: Once the packet is signed and returned, the firm can typically start requesting medical records and itemized billing from the providers involved. Those records help show what care you received, when you received it, and what charges are tied to the incident.
  3. Next steps: After records begin coming in, the firm can better evaluate what needs to be proven and what information is still missing—without promising any outcome.

How This Applies

Apply to your situation: Because the firm needs signed intake forms and medical releases to obtain medical bills and records, not receiving the mailed packet mainly creates a paperwork bottleneck. The next practical step is confirming your mailing address and email, then having the firm resend the packet (often by email for faster turnaround). Once you return the signed forms, the firm can usually begin requesting the records and bills needed to document the claim.

Conclusion

If you never received the intake packet, it usually just means the firm cannot fully open the file and start collecting the medical records and itemized bills needed to support your injury claim. Confirm your best mailing address and email, ask for the packet to be resent (email/e-sign options can be faster), and return the signed forms as soon as you can. If you’re unsure what you’re signing, ask the firm to explain each document in plain English before you send it back.

Talk to a Personal Injury Attorney in Durham

If the issue involves injuries, insurance questions, or a potential deadline, speaking with a licensed North Carolina attorney can help clarify options and timelines. Call 919-313-2737 to discuss what happened and what steps may make sense next.

Disclaimer: This article provides general information about North Carolina personal injury law based on the single question stated above. It is not legal advice and does not create an attorney-client relationship. It also is not medical advice. Laws, procedures, and local practice can change and may vary by county. If there may be a deadline, act promptly and speak with a licensed North Carolina attorney.

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