Can I resume medical care after a gap in treatment and still seek compensation for my injuries? — MO

The information on this site is for general informational purposes only, may be outdated, and is not legal advice; do not rely on it without consulting your own attorney. See full disclaimer.

Detailed answer: Resuming care after a treatment gap and seeking compensation under Missouri law

This article explains, in plain language, how restarting medical care after a gap can affect your ability to recover money for injuries in Missouri. It covers the main legal issues you will face, what evidence helps your claim, how defenses typically respond to a treatment gap, and practical steps to protect your rights. This is educational information only — not legal advice.

Key legal ideas you should know

  • Causation: In a personal injury claim you must show that the defendant’s negligence caused your injuries. A long gap in treatment gives the other side an argument that your symptoms were not caused by the accident or that something else happened later.
  • Mitigation (duty to limit damages): Missouri law expects injured people to seek reasonable medical care to limit further harm. A defendant may argue you failed to mitigate damages if the gap was unreasonable and increased your injury.
  • Evidence and expert proof: To link later treatment to an earlier accident, you normally need medical records and expert testimony that explain how the injury is related and why symptoms might not have been treated immediately.
  • Statute of limitations: You must file your lawsuit before Missouri’s deadline for personal injury claims. See Mo. Rev. Stat. § 516.120 for limitations on actions. It is essential to confirm the correct deadline for your situation and act early: https://revisor.mo.gov/main/OneSection.aspx?section=516.120

How a treatment gap affects your claim — common scenarios

Below are typical ways a gap can impact a case, and what helps in each situation.

1) Small gap (days–weeks)

Short delays are often easy to explain (busy schedules, initial over-the-counter care, trying home remedies). If you get medical care soon after and records show consistent symptoms, most claims are not harmed.

2) Moderate gap (weeks–a few months)

A moderate gap invites more questions. Clear documentation of symptoms from the earliest point (photos, immediate notes, witness statements) plus prompt diagnostic tests once you seek care will help. A treating doctor’s affidavit or opinion linking your later symptoms to the incident is valuable.

3) Long gap (many months–years)

Long gaps are the biggest hurdle. Defendants will likely argue the injury came from another event or natural progression of a preexisting condition. To overcome that, you need strong medical opinion testimony showing how the original incident could produce delayed or worsening symptoms and why the delay does not break the causal chain.

What evidence strengthens a claim after a gap

  • All medical records after resuming care, including ER notes, imaging reports (CT/MRI/X-ray), physical therapy notes, and prescriptions.
  • Any contemporaneous evidence from the time of the accident: photos of injuries or the scene, eyewitness contact info, police reports, and notes you made about symptoms right after the event.
  • Documentation explaining the reason for the delay — e.g., no insurance, inability to pay, caring for family, lack of symptoms immediately, or advice from a provider to wait. Records or bills showing denial of care or financial hardship help explain gaps.
  • Expert medical opinions that connect your current diagnosis to the original accident and explain expected timelines for symptom onset or delayed presentations.
  • Records of prior health conditions (to identify preexisting issues) and your medical history so experts can separate new injuries from old ones.

How defendants usually challenge claims with gaps

Expect these common defenses:

  • Arguing lack of causation — the injury wasn’t caused by the accident.
  • Claiming an intervening event caused the injury during the gap.
  • Saying you failed to mitigate damages by not seeking timely care.
  • Using the gap to cast doubt on severity — implying the injury wasn’t serious if you didn’t seek immediate help.

What you should do now — step-by-step

  1. Resume medical care immediately. Tell each provider about the original accident and give them a full timeline.
  2. Preserve records. Request copies of all medical records and imaging. Keep bills and receipts showing medical expenses and out-of-pocket payments.
  3. Document the reason for your gap. Obtain documentation that explains why you delayed (insurance denial letters, financial records, written notes, or affidavits).
  4. Get a clear medical link. Ask your treating doctor to explain, in writing, how your current condition relates to the prior incident and whether delayed treatment changed prognosis.
  5. Collect corroborating evidence. Keep photos, police reports, witness contact information, and any contemporaneous notes about symptoms after the event.
  6. Talk with an attorney early. An attorney can arrange medical experts, gather records, evaluate the statute of limitations, and advise on insurance communications.
  7. Watch deadlines. Consult Mo. Rev. Stat. § 516.120 for filing limits and act early to protect your right to sue: https://revisor.mo.gov/main/OneSection.aspx?section=516.120

When a gap might not be fatal to your case

You can still obtain compensation if:

  • Your later medical evidence and experts connect the injury to the original incident.
  • You document a reasonable reason for the delay (cost, lack of symptoms, limited access to care, misdiagnosis, or treatment advised to wait).
  • Objective testing performed after you resume care (imaging, labs, etc.) supports a diagnosis consistent with the original trauma.

Practical example (hypothetical)

Imagine you were rear-ended in a car crash but had no insurance and tried over-the-counter remedies for three months. Your neck pain then worsens and an MRI shows a herniated disc. A spine specialist writes an opinion that the disc herniation is consistent with whiplash-type trauma from the crash and that symptoms can sometimes appear or worsen later. With that record and the original accident report, you can still pursue compensation. The defense will challenge the timeline, but an expert can bridge the gap.

How an attorney can help in Missouri

  • Obtain and organize medical records and imaging.
  • Retain medical experts to provide opinions about causation and delayed symptoms.
  • Explain how Missouri rules and relevant case law will apply to your specific facts.
  • Watch and advise about filing deadlines under Missouri law, including Mo. Rev. Stat. § 516.120: https://revisor.mo.gov/main/OneSection.aspx?section=516.120
  • Negotiate with insurers and prepare for litigation if needed.

When to act

Act promptly. Even if you just resumed care, collecting records and getting an expert opinion early makes your claim stronger. Waiting longer makes evidence fade and defenses easier to argue.

Disclaimer

This article is for general informational purposes only. It does not provide legal advice and does not create an attorney-client relationship. For advice tailored to your situation and deadlines that may apply to your claim, consult a licensed Missouri attorney.

Helpful Hints

  • Resume care and tell each provider about the original accident and all symptoms.
  • Ask providers to document when symptoms began and whether they relate to the accident.
  • Keep a daily symptom journal from the date of the injury forward, including pain levels and activity limitations.
  • Save all medical bills and evidence of attempts to get care (insurance denials, appointment cancellations).
  • Take photos of visible injuries and the accident scene as soon as you can.
  • Do not post detailed information about your injury or the accident on social media — insurers and defense lawyers use social media posts against claimants.
  • Speak with a Missouri personal injury attorney before accepting a quick settlement offer; gaps in treatment can lower settlement value but good medical opinions can restore it.

The information on this site is for general informational purposes only, may be outdated, and is not legal advice; do not rely on it without consulting your own attorney. See full disclaimer.