When a person suffers an injury in a car accident, a slip-and-fall accident, or any serious injury caused by another party’s negligence, it often has ripple effects throughout all aspects of their life. A serious injury causes more than physical pain, it also results in escalating medical debt at the same time that the injury victim may be unable to return to work at their previous capacity—or unable to return at all. Some catastrophic injuries may have life-altering adverse impacts on the injury victim’s quality of life.
The temporary and permanent consequences of an injury caused by someone else’s fault become the injury victim’s “damages” in a compensation claim. The civil courts separate most personal injury damages into two categories: economic and non-economic damages.
After an accident, economic damages add up quickly. An injury victim’s economic damages are the tangible consequences of their injury that are relatively easy to calculate using evidence such as medical bills, receipts for out-of-pocket expenses, and employer statements showing missed workdays. Common economic damages recovered in personal injury claims include the following:
An injury victim’s attorney carefully reviews their medical expenses and consults with medical experts to estimate future expenses related to the injury to ensure that their client seeks the maximum compensation available to them in their injury claim for economic damages.
An injury victim’s non-economic damages are intangible and more difficult to assign a monetary amount, but they are usually the most distressing or devastating aspect of a serious injury. Common non-economic damages in personal injury claims include:
Although it’s challenging to assign a monetary amount to intangible damages like pain, suffering, and PTSD, the civil court’s only remedy for these damages is to award financial compensation.
The vast majority of personal injury claims—as many as 93%—are resolved with a settlement from the at-fault party’s insurance, such as auto insurance after a car accident, or property liability insurance after a slip-and-fall injury. Only when an insurance company disputes aspects of a claim or denies their policyholder’s liability does the case go to court in a lawsuit. Working with a personal injury lawyer in Atlanta to take a case to court can typically take longer to resolve but often ends in a large jury award for damages because juries typically sympathize with injury victims.
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