What Is a Letter of Protection and How Can It Affect Your Injury Case?

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What Is a Letter of Protection?

After an accident, getting medical treatment should be the priority. But for many injured people, the cost of care becomes a major obstacle.

A letter of protection is one way some accident victims receive treatment while their injury claim is pending. It is usually a written agreement between the injured person, their attorney, and a medical provider. The provider agrees to treat the patient now and wait to be paid from the future settlement or judgment.

In simple terms, the medical provider delays collection until the case is resolved.

This can be helpful when someone needs care but does not have health insurance, has high deductibles, or cannot afford treatment out of pocket.

If you are dealing with medical bills after an accident, an LOP may become part of your personal injury claim, but it is important to understand how it works before relying on one.

Why Letters of Protection Are Used

Many accident victims face immediate medical needs before any settlement money is available.

Treatment Cannot Always Wait

After an injury, patients may need:

  • Diagnostic imaging
  • Specialist appointments
  • Physical therapy
  • Chiropractic care
  • Pain management
  • Surgery evaluations
  • Follow-up care

Insurance claims often take months or longer to resolve. A person with serious injuries may not be able to wait that long for treatment.

Health Insurance May Not Cover Everything

Even when someone has health insurance, coverage may still leave major gaps.

Common problems include:

  • High deductibles
  • Out-of-network providers
  • Treatment denials
  • Limited therapy visits
  • Large copays
  • Delayed approvals

A letter of protection may allow the injured person to continue treatment while the legal claim moves forward.

How a Letter of Protection Works

A letter of protection usually states that the medical provider agrees to wait for payment until the injury case is resolved.

The Basic Process

The process often works like this:

  • The injured person needs medical care after an accident.
  • The provider agrees to treat the patient without immediate payment.
  • The attorney sends a letter confirming that the provider will be paid from any settlement or recovery.
  • When the case resolves, the medical provider is paid from the settlement funds.
  • Any remaining settlement funds are distributed after other liens, fees, or expenses are addressed.

This arrangement can help bridge the gap between the accident and the final recovery.

The Benefits of a Letter of Protection

Letters of protection can be valuable in the right case.

Access to Medical Care

The biggest benefit is access. Without an LOP, some injured people might delay treatment or avoid care entirely because they cannot afford it.

That delay can hurt both the person’s health and the injury claim.

Better Medical Documentation

Consistent treatment creates records that help show:

  • What injuries were caused by the accident
  • How severe the injuries were
  • What treatment was necessary
  • Whether symptoms improved or worsened
  • Whether future care may be needed

Medical documentation is often one of the most important parts of proving damages.

Protection From Immediate Collections

A letter of protection may also help prevent immediate collection pressure while the case is pending.

This can reduce stress for injured people who are already dealing with pain, lost wages, and uncertainty.

The Risks of a Letter of Protection

An LOP can help, but it is not free money. The bill still has to be paid.

Medical Bills Come Out of the Settlement

When the case resolves, medical providers with LOP agreements are usually paid before the injured person receives their final funds.

This means the final amount the client keeps may depend heavily on:

  • The total settlement
  • The amount of medical bills
  • Attorney fees and case costs
  • Other liens or reimbursement claims
  • Whether bills can be reduced

If medical bills become too high, they can significantly reduce the final recovery.

Insurance Companies May Attack the Bills

Insurance companies often argue that treatment under an LOP is inflated or litigation-driven.

They may claim:

  • The treatment was unnecessary
  • The charges were too high
  • The provider was biased
  • The care was arranged only to increase the value of the claim
  • The patient would not have received that much treatment otherwise

These arguments can become a major issue during settlement negotiations or trial.

Why Insurance Companies Focus on LOP Treatment

Insurance adjusters know that LOP treatment can increase the value of an injury claim because it creates medical bills and records.

Bias Arguments

Insurers may argue that a provider treating under a letter of protection has a financial interest in the outcome of the case because the provider gets paid from the settlement.

Contact Dermer Law today for a free consultation.

Billing Challenges

Insurance companies may compare LOP charges to what health insurance would have paid for similar treatment.

They may argue the billed amount is higher than reasonable market value.

This is one reason careful billing review and negotiation can matter before a case resolves.

How Letters of Protection Affect Settlement

LOPs can affect settlement in several ways.

They May Increase Claimed Damages

Medical bills are a major part of many injury claims. If an LOP allows someone to receive treatment they otherwise could not afford, those bills may become part of the damages claim.

They May Reduce the Net Recovery

At the same time, unpaid medical bills must usually be resolved from the settlement.

For example, a settlement may look strong on paper, but the final amount the client receives can shrink if medical bills and liens are high.

That is why resolving medical bills properly is an important part of the settlement process.

Letters of Protection and Car Accident Claims

LOPs are common in serious car accident cases, especially when injured victims need treatment before liability insurance pays anything.

A crash victim may need months of physical therapy, imaging, injections, or specialist care while the insurance company is still investigating fault.

Without an LOP, the injured person might stop treatment early, which can harm both their recovery and the legal claim.

Medical Liens and Letters of Protection Are Related

A letter of protection is often connected to medical liens.

What Is a Medical Lien?

A medical lien is a claim against settlement funds for unpaid medical treatment.

If a provider treats someone under an LOP, they may have a right to be paid from the recovery before the client receives the remaining funds.

Lien Negotiation Can Matter

In some cases, medical bills may be negotiated before settlement funds are distributed.

Reducing liens and bills can make a major difference in the injured person’s final recovery.

When a Letter of Protection May Make Sense

An LOP may be useful when:

  • The injury is serious
  • The person cannot afford treatment upfront
  • Health insurance is unavailable or inadequate
  • The provider is reputable
  • The treatment is medically necessary
  • The claim has a strong liability basis
  • The patient understands that bills must be paid later

It should not be used casually or without understanding the financial consequences.

When a Letter of Protection Can Create Problems

An LOP may create problems when:

  • Treatment is excessive
  • Bills are unusually high
  • Liability is disputed
  • Insurance coverage is limited
  • The provider does not document care clearly
  • The patient does not understand repayment obligations

If the settlement is smaller than expected, unpaid medical bills can become a major issue.

How to Protect Yourself When Using a Letter of Protection

Patients should understand the agreement before signing or relying on an LOP.

Ask What You Will Owe

You should understand whether the full bill must be paid from the settlement or whether reductions may be possible later.

Keep Copies of All Records

Medical bills, treatment notes, imaging reports, and provider communications may all become important.

Follow Treatment Recommendations

Consistent treatment helps support both recovery and the injury claim.

Avoid Unnecessary Treatment

Treatment should be based on medical need, not just the existence of an injury claim.

A letter of protection can help injured people access needed medical care, but it can also affect settlement value, lien negotiations, and the final recovery. Contact Dermer Law today for a free consultation.

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