Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Accident Claim and Personal Injury Basic Guide to Claiming.

As everyone knows, life can be quite unpredictable at times. The chances are that at some point in your life you have had an accident of some form, and simply accepted it as just that: an accident that you could do nothing about. Accidents just happen, after all. But what if the accident is not your fault?One thing that you might not have thought of if you have had an accident that was not your fault is that you could be entitled to compensation. Equally, for those who have not had an accident that was not their fault, it pays to be clued up just in case the unfortunate becomes reality for either you or even to help out relatives and close friends.

The first question you should be asking is what exactly you would be able to claim. If someone else is responsible for the accident you have had, then you will be permitted to obtain an amount of compensation in recognition of your injury. You may also be eligible to receive compensation that will cover any financial losses, alongside compensation for possible expenses incurred. This will also cover any future losses that you make as a result of your accident.

At this point you may be thinking that you have never suffered a serious physical injury so compensation does not apply to you. However, compensation for injury does not only cover just physical injury. If you have suffered mental injury then there is also the possibility that you could be able to receive compensation.

You can be compensated for pain or suffering, and, in addition to this, for the loss of amenity. Losing your amenities can take various forms. An example of this could be that the injury you have suffered has either prevented or restricted you from going back to leisure activity or a hobby that you frequented prior to your accident.

Furthermore to this, there are guidelines in place that good legal advice will alert you to, in which to help in assessing your chances of receiving compensation. Sound legal advisors will order suitable medical experts to assess you and then to provide a report in relation to both the nature and the effects of your injury. The detailed information given by the medical experts will then allow your legal advisors to counsel you upon your entitlement to compensation.

In terms of your possible financial losses, you will be permitted to recuperate your expenses incurred as a consequence of your accident. These expenses can be both past and future, and can include (but are not limited to) such measures as:

Loss of personal effects

Property damage

Policy excess or the value of your preferred vehicle of transport

Past and future loss of earnings

Loss of a pension entitlement

Past and future private treatment fees

Medication costs and or past and future care costs

Aids and appliances

Cost of home adaptations

Travel expenses

It is also important that you make a detailed record of every financial loss or expense you acquire as a result of your accident. Good legal counsel will, where possible, seek an interim payment to reimburse your loss.

This article is free to republish provided the authors resource box below remains intact.

About the Author

Dino Skinner is a member of the Law Society’s Personal Injury Panel, the Association of Personal Injury Lawyers and is a CEDR accredited Mediator. Dino is a Brighton Solicitor for London Law Firm Healys specialising in Serious Injury claims.

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