What Should I Expect After Completing Physical Therapy for My North Carolina Car Accident Injury?

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FAQ 1: What Should I Expect After Completing Physical Therapy for My North Carolina Car Accident Injury?

Finishing physical therapy marks an important milestone in your recovery, but it doesn’t end your claim. In North Carolina, once your provider releases you from therapy, the next phase focuses on gathering and organizing all your medical information. Your law firm or claims handler will request your final progress notes, billing statements, and any diagnostic reports. This helps show the full scope of your treatment and any remaining limitations. You should receive a medical‐records release form to sign. This authorizes your therapy clinic and other providers to send detailed records and itemized bills. After you sign, allow 2–4 weeks for records retrieval. During this period, keep track of exercises or home-care routines your therapist prescribed—you may still need to show continued self-care as proof of ongoing injury. Once your records arrive, your case team will compile everything into a single document called a “medical chronology.” That summary highlights treatment dates, diagnoses, procedures, and total charges. You’ll review it for accuracy and then sign off before it goes to the insurer or the other side.
  • Confirm your last PT appointment date and final evaluation report.
  • Sign and return the medical‐records release promptly.
  • Document any persistent pain or home exercises.
  • Review itemized bills and progress notes for accuracy.
  • Approve the compiled medical chronology before submission.
If you’d rather leave these steps to an experienced team, contact Wallace Pierce Law. Email us at intake@wallacepierce.com or call (919) 313-2729.

FAQ 2: How Do I Prepare and Submit a Pre-Demand Verification Package in North Carolina?

A pre-demand verification package, sometimes called a “demand package,” gathers all documentation you need before you formally ask an insurer or liable party for compensation. In North Carolina, this step shows you’ve fully documented your injury and expenses. It typically includes medical records, billing statements, proof of lost wages, and a cover letter explaining your damages. Start by collecting every medical bill and record related to your collision: hospital visits, imaging reports, therapy notes, and prescriptions. Request wage‐verification letters from your employer and any receipts for out-of-pocket expenses. Next, draft a concise cover letter summarizing your treatment timeline, ongoing limitations, and total economic losses. Once assembled, review each document for accuracy: correct dates, provider names, and dollar amounts. Sign a verification form certifying the package’s completeness. Send the entire packet by certified mail or a tracked courier service so you have proof of delivery. Keep a copy for your records.
  • Compile all medical records and itemized bills.
  • Obtain wage‐verification and expense receipts.
  • Write a clear cover letter summarizing damages.
  • Sign the verification statement for accuracy.
  • Mail the package via certified or tracked delivery.
If preparing this on your own feels overwhelming, Wallace Pierce Law can guide you. Email intake@wallacepierce.com or call (919) 313-2729.  
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