Nobody knows quite what it is like to be injured until it happens to you or someone you love.
A sudden onset of injury can turn your life upside down. You can’t move or function anyway close to normal. You are worried, concerned, and frustrated.
You are also uncertain about the future. You also may be unsure about how this is going to be taken care from an insurance process. That is where we can help.
Right from the start, my priority is to take care of immediate issues. There are always immediate issues that require our help after an accident injury. Then it is on to the early legal work – which is so important to getting the best results.
In the end, my job is to obtain a fair, full, and maximum insurance settlement for my injured clients. This is a process that requires diligent and detailed legal work.
To give you an idea of what is behind an injury settlement in a more serious injury case, below is a list of the more important areas of compensation.
Areas of Compensation for a More Serious Injury
- Compensation for the immediate disruption of life, including pain, suffering, emergency medical treatment, hospitalization, loss in freedom of movement, and the anxieties related to a sudden onset of injury.
- Compensation for the on-going pain and physical restrictions, including the difficulties encountered with walking, standing, lifting, bending, driving, and all of the activities of daily living.
- Compensation for the difficulties imposed by the medical recovery, including the medical treatment, rehabilitation, medications, and home health care.
- Compensation for the on-going impact the injury has on work, household, family, and personal responsibilities.
- Compensation for the overall loss of health, well-being, and disruption of life, including the loss in restful sleep, fatigue, productivity, and the inability to function as normal.
- Compensation for the longer-range consequences of the injury, including the going need to manage the injury, future medical, permanent disability and impairment, loss in earning capacity, and the acceleration of physical decline requiring earlier need for assisted living.





