What happens if the injury gets worse later and the I need follow-up care like an orthopedic visit?

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What happens if the injury gets worse later and the I need follow-up care like an orthopedic visit? - North Carolina

Short Answer

In North Carolina, if your injury gets worse later and you reasonably need follow-up care (like an orthopedic visit), that care can still be part of your personal injury claim—as long as it is connected to the original fall and supported by medical documentation. You should not “wait it out” just to see what happens; gaps in treatment can make it harder to prove the worsening came from the fall. Also, you still have to file your lawsuit within the legal deadline, even if treatment is ongoing.

Understanding the Problem

If you slipped and fell in North Carolina and your wrist still hurts after urgent care, you may be asking: can you get follow-up treatment like an orthopedic appointment and still include that in your claim, even if the pain gets worse later? This question matters because the timing of care and the way your symptoms are documented can affect whether the other side accepts that the follow-up treatment is tied to the fall.

Apply the Law

North Carolina personal injury claims generally allow you to seek compensation for medical care that is reasonably necessary because of the injury-causing incident, including follow-up care and, when supported by evidence, future care. The key is proving causation (the fall caused the need for the orthopedic visit) and showing you acted reasonably to address your symptoms (often discussed as a duty to mitigate damages). These cases are typically handled in North Carolina civil court, and the deadline to file suit is a separate issue from how long you treat.

Key Requirements

  • Medical connection to the fall: Your follow-up care needs to be medically tied to the slip-and-fall injury, not a separate condition or a new injury.
  • Reasonable and necessary treatment: The orthopedic visit (and any testing or therapy) should be the kind of care a reasonable person would get for ongoing or worsening symptoms.
  • Consistent documentation: Your records should show the timeline—when symptoms started, how they changed, and what providers recommended.
  • Mitigation (acting reasonably): If symptoms worsen, you generally help your case by following medical advice and not delaying care without a good reason.
  • Proof of charges and payment sources: Bills, itemized statements, and insurance explanations of benefits help show what was charged and why.
  • Protecting the claim timeline: Ongoing treatment does not automatically extend the deadline to file a lawsuit.

What the Statutes Say

Analysis

Apply the Rule to the Facts: Here, the key facts are that you went to urgent care the next day for imaging, you remain in pain, and you may be referred to an orthopedic provider if symptoms continue. If an orthopedic provider documents that your ongoing wrist pain is consistent with the fall and recommends follow-up care (like additional imaging, a brace, therapy, or other treatment), that follow-up care is typically the kind of expense that can be included in a North Carolina injury claim. The main risk is a long gap in treatment or unclear records that let the other side argue something else caused the worsening.

Process & Timing

  1. Who files: You (the injured person) through an attorney, if you hire one. Where: Usually North Carolina civil court (county depends on the parties and where events occurred). What: A claim is often started by notifying the responsible party/insurer and gathering records; a lawsuit is started by filing a complaint. When: Start documenting and treating promptly; do not wait until the legal deadline is close to begin building the file.
  2. Build the medical proof: Follow up with the provider who saw you (or your primary care provider) and ask for a clear plan if symptoms persist. If you see an orthopedist, make sure they record (1) the history of the fall, (2) when symptoms began, and (3) whether the condition is consistent with that mechanism of injury.
  3. Track bills and liens: Keep itemized bills and payment information. If the case resolves by settlement or judgment, medical liens may need to be identified and addressed as part of the payout process.

Exceptions & Pitfalls

  • Gaps in care: If you wait weeks or months before seeing anyone again, the defense may argue the worsening came from something else or that you made it worse by delaying treatment.
  • Incomplete history to the orthopedist: If you do not clearly report the fall and the symptom timeline, the records may not link the condition to the incident.
  • Preexisting conditions: Prior wrist problems do not automatically bar a claim, but they can make causation harder to prove without careful medical documentation.
  • New injury after the fall: If you reinjure the wrist later, the case can become a “which event caused what” dispute unless your records separate the symptoms.
  • Medical billing surprises: Providers may assert liens against any recovery for treatment related to the injury, and those liens can affect the net amount you receive.

Conclusion

In North Carolina, if your wrist injury worsens after a slip and fall and you reasonably need follow-up care like an orthopedic visit, that treatment can still be part of your injury claim if your medical records connect it to the fall and you act reasonably in getting care. The most important practical step is to get the follow-up evaluation documented and keep your records organized, while also making sure you file any lawsuit within the applicable statute of limitations.

Talk to a Personal Injury Attorney

If you’re dealing with a slip-and-fall injury that isn’t improving and you may need orthopedic follow-up, our firm has experienced attorneys who can help you understand your options and timelines. Reach out today. Call [CONTACT NUMBER].

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.

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