
10 Mistakes Which Can Reduce the Value of Your Personal Injury Claim
Santa Monica Personal Injury Attorneys - Call Us Today (310) 692-9582
If you have been injured in an accident, you should avoid these ten actions which can reduce the value of your claim. Whether it was an auto accident, a bike accident, or a pedestrian accident, one thing is certain: the at-fault party's insurance company will seize on every opportunity to use your conduct against you in order to reduce what they must pay you.
Actions you should avoid in a personal injury claim include:
- Giving a recorded statement to the other driver's insurance adjuster. The adjuster wants you to believe that giving a statement will help the insurance company to evaluate your claim and pay you fairly. Baloney. Your recorded statement is strictly for the insurance company's benefit. They want to lock you into a statement that they can later try to use against you. They will ask you wide-ranging questions, including questions that your lawyer would not let you answer if you were in a deposition. Your statement will only hurt your claim, not help it.
- Not seeing a medical provider soon after an accident. If you're the type of person who holds off on seeing a doctor, hoping that the pain will go away on its own over time, that conservative approach will hurt your personal injury claim. Insurance companies will use your delay in seeking treatment against you. They will take the position that if you were really injured, you would have treated right away. They don't care that you didn't see a doctor because you couldn't afford it, or couldn't miss time from work, or because you had no transportation. After an accident, if you did not treat at an emergency room, we recommend that you see a medical provider at least within a few days of the accident - the sooner the better. If you need a doctor referral, our personal injury lawyers can refer you to a doctor who will treat you on a lien basis (i.e., the doctor agrees to wait to be paid until your case settles).
- Not telling your doctor about every body part that was injured in the accident. The tendency after an accident is to focus all conversations with your doctor on your most serious complaints. You may not mention injuries that seem minor compared to those that are the most pressing. But here's the problem: let's say that two months after the accident, that knee pain you initially thought was minor (because you were more focused on a broken wrist) is now concerning you because it hasn't gone away. So the first time that "knee pain" is mentioned in your medical records is two months after the accident. That's a problem if you turn out to be diagnosed with a torn meniscus. The insurance adjuster will contend that the knee condition was not caused by the accident due to the two month gap before knee complaints first appear in your records. Suggestion: write down on a piece of paper every pain you have felt since the accident, and take that paper with you to your initial doctor visit. Make sure the doctor enters each complaint in the chart notes.
- Giving a signed medical authorization to the other driver's insurance company. A medical authorization signed by you gives the insurance company unfettered access to all of your prior medical records, including medical records which have nothing to do with the accident. You have a right of privacy in your unrelated medical records. You lose that right by providing a signed medical authorization to the adjuster. The insurance company's goal is to find something in your prior medical records that they can point the finger at as the cause of your current complaints. Instead of giving the insurance company a signed medical authorization, you or your attorney should provide them with only your accident-related medical records and bills.
- Missed doctor's appointments or gaps in treatment. The opposing side will use it against you if your medical records reflect that you missed or canceled appointments, or if there are lengthy gaps between visits. To the defendant's insurance company, missed appointments or lengthy gaps mean your injuries weren't serious.
- Posting about the accident on a social media site. Insurance companies cyber-stalk personal injury claimants, hoping to find anything that the victims posted which the adjuster can use against them. We advise our personal injury clients to increase all privacy settings on social media sites to the maximum. If your attorney ends up filing a lawsuit against the at-fault party, the opposing side will subpoena all emails, text messages and social media site postings made by you that have anything to do with the accident or your injuries. They are hoping to strike gold by finding something that puts you in a bad light.


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