Here’s the formula used by insurance companies to determine the value of your personal injury claim.
Figuring out how much your accident injuries are worth is a critical aspect of any accident claim. And it is the part of a claim about which it is most difficult to generalize; the amount depends on your very particular circumstances. Here we try to give you a basic understanding of how insurance companies determine the value of a claim.
What an Insurance Company Must Compensate
To determine what your claim is worth, you must first know the things for which you are entitled to compensation. Usually, a person who is liable for an accident — and therefore his or her liability insurance company — must pay an injured person for:
- medical care and related expenses
- income lost because of the accident, because of time spent unable to work or undergoing treatment for injuries
- permanent physical disability or disfigurement
- loss of family, social, and educational experiences, including missed school or training, vacation or recreation, or a special event
- emotional damages, such as stress, embarrassment, depression, or strains on family relationships — for example, the inability to take care of children, anxiety over the effects of an accident on an unborn child, or interference with sexual relations, and damaged property.
The Insurance Company’s Damages Formula
When determining compensation, it is usually simple to add up the money spent and money lost, but there is no precise way to put a dollar figure on pain and suffering or on missed experiences and lost opportunities. That’s where an insurance company’s damages formula comes in.
At the beginning of claim negotiations, an insurance adjuster adds up the total medical expenses related to the injury. These expenses are referred to as “medical special damages” or simply “specials.” That’s the base figure the adjuster uses to figure out how much to pay the injured person for pain, suffering, and other nonmonetary losses, which are called “general” damages.
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This entry was posted on Wednesday, May 30th, 2007 at 4:49 am and is filed under Claims. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.