In a North Carolina personal injury case, you should send your lawyer a clear, dated update that shows (1) where you are treating, (2) what appointments you have had and what is scheduled next, and (3) whether any provider has released you from care or given work/activity restrictions. This helps your lawyer prove your medical damages, track your recovery, and avoid gaps in treatment that the insurance company may use to argue your injuries are not related or not serious. Keep it factual and consistent with what you tell your medical providers.
If you are a North Carolina injury claimant and you are still going to medical appointments for the injury, what information should you send your lawyer so the firm can confirm whether you have completed treatment, especially when the firm asked you to respond with a treatment update by phone or text?
In North Carolina, your medical treatment and appointment history matters because it connects your injuries to the incident and supports the amount and reasonableness of your medical charges. Your lawyer also needs accurate treatment status to decide when the claim is ready to be valued and presented, and to respond to insurance and litigation requests for medical records and bills. If a lawsuit is filed, the other side can use formal discovery tools (like requests for documents and subpoenas) to obtain relevant medical records, so your lawyer must know what providers exist and what treatment is ongoing.
Apply the Rule to the Facts: Because you are receiving treatment related to an injury claim and the firm is checking whether you have completed treatment, your lawyer mainly needs a current snapshot: your last appointment, your next appointment, and whether any provider has discharged you. They also need the names of any providers involved so they can request records/bills and accurately document your ongoing care. A short, factual text update is usually enough to start, as long as it includes the key dates and providers.
In North Carolina, your lawyer needs a simple, factual treatment update to document your medical care and support your injury claim: the providers you are seeing, your last and next appointment dates, and whether you have been released or still have restrictions. The most helpful next step is to send a dated message listing your last visit, your next scheduled visit, and any new referrals or discharge paperwork as soon as the firm requests the update.
If you're dealing with an injury claim while still treating and attending appointments, our firm has experienced attorneys who can help you understand what information matters, how it affects your claim, and what timelines to watch. Reach out today.
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.