What should I do if I get new medical treatment or new bills after the demand has already been sent?

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What should I do if I get new medical treatment or new bills after the demand has already been sent? - North Carolina

Short Answer

In North Carolina, if you get new treatment or receive new medical bills after your lawyer has already sent a settlement demand, you should tell your lawyer right away and provide the new provider information and paperwork. Your lawyer can usually send a written “supplement” to the insurance adjuster with updated bills, records, and an updated demand amount if needed. Do not assume the insurer will “figure it out” later—unsubmitted bills often do not get paid in a settlement.

Understanding the Problem

If you have a North Carolina personal injury claim and your lawyer has already sent a demand to the insurance company, what happens if you start new medical treatment or new bills arrive afterward? This question matters because the demand is the insurer’s main snapshot of your injuries and losses at that time, and new treatment can change the value and timing of settlement discussions. Here, one key fact is that the demand is being submitted after the firm has already received bills and records from the treatment providers.

Apply the Law

North Carolina law generally allows an injured person to seek compensation for accident-related medical expenses and other damages, but settlement negotiations are driven by documentation. Practically, that means the insurance company evaluates your claim based on what it has in hand: medical records, itemized bills, and proof that the treatment relates to the injury event. If new treatment happens after the demand goes out, the usual approach is to update (supplement) the demand so the insurer can evaluate the new information before any settlement is finalized. Also, you must still protect the lawsuit deadline while negotiations continue; for many personal injury cases in North Carolina, the limitations period is three years.

Key Requirements

  • Prompt notice to your lawyer: Tell your lawyer as soon as you schedule new appointments, start new therapy, get imaging, or receive new bills, so the claim file stays current.
  • Proof the treatment is related: New bills help most when the records connect the treatment to the injuries from the incident, not an unrelated condition.
  • Complete documentation: Provide the provider name, dates of service, and any bills, discharge instructions, referrals, or work restrictions you receive.
  • Accurate totals: Your lawyer may need to update the “specials” (medical expense totals) and adjust the demand amount to match the updated documentation.
  • Settlement timing control: Avoid signing a release until you and your lawyer decide you are ready, because a release usually ends the claim even if more bills arrive later.
  • Deadline protection: Negotiations do not automatically extend the time to file suit, so your lawyer should track the statute of limitations while the demand is pending.

What the Statutes Say

Analysis

Apply the Rule to the Facts: Because your firm is sending a demand after collecting bills and records, the insurer will likely evaluate the claim based on that package. If you later receive additional bills or start new treatment, those items will not be part of the insurer’s evaluation unless you provide them and your lawyer supplements the demand. Updating the demand helps keep negotiations accurate and reduces the risk of settling based on incomplete medical documentation.

Process & Timing

  1. Who files: Your attorney. Where: Directly with the insurance adjuster handling the claim in North Carolina (not a court). What: A written supplemental demand or demand update with new itemized bills, updated records, and an updated summary of treatment. When: As soon as the new treatment occurs or the new bills/records arrive.
  2. Negotiation adjustment: The adjuster may pause evaluation to review the new records, request additional documentation, or revise the offer based on the updated medical expense total and treatment course. Timeframes vary by carrier and how quickly providers produce records.
  3. Decision point: If the insurer is ready to settle, your lawyer should confirm whether any additional treatment is planned and whether any bills are still outstanding before you sign a release and finalize settlement paperwork.

Exceptions & Pitfalls

  • Settling too early: If you sign a release and later get additional treatment or bills, you may have no practical way to make the insurer pay those new amounts.
  • Gaps in treatment: Long gaps can lead the insurer to argue the new treatment is unrelated or not necessary, so it is important that records clearly explain why treatment resumed.
  • Incomplete provider information: If you do not give your lawyer the correct provider name, location, and dates of service, records requests can be delayed and negotiations can stall.
  • Mixing unrelated care: If the new bills include treatment for an unrelated condition, the insurer may dispute the charges; clean, separated documentation helps.
  • Deadline risk: Waiting for “one more bill” can push the case close to the statute of limitations; your lawyer may need to file suit to protect the claim while treatment continues.

Conclusion

If you get new medical treatment or new bills after a demand has already been sent in North Carolina, you should promptly give your lawyer the updated provider details and paperwork so the demand can be supplemented and the insurer evaluates the full, current claim. The most important practical rule is not to sign a settlement release until you are comfortable that your treatment picture and billing are complete. Next step: ask your attorney to send a written supplemental demand to the adjuster as soon as the new bills or records are available.

Talk to a Personal Injury Attorney

If you're dealing with new treatment or new medical bills after your demand has already been submitted, 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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