South Dakota / Nebraska / Wyoming
A key component of damages is showing you have experienced "pain and suffering".
Unlike lost wages or payment of medical bills, pain and suffering and what it's worth is subjective. In other words, one jury may find that it's worth one amount and another could come up with a greatly increased or reduced dollar amount.
Pain and suffering may cover a wide variety of ailments because it includes not just the pain or suffering you experienced immediately following your injury, but also any additional pain and suffering. It may also include ongoing physical, mental or emotional pain.
When a person is involved in a car accident, they may immediately experience an injury from broken glass and need stitches or other immediate medical care. However, weeks later, many experience continuing pain, such as a sore back or neck, as a result of the crash. This later injury will be included in pain and suffering.
To prove physical pain and suffering, a good personal injury attorney will highlight statements from medical records. In addition, it's common for family members and friends to testify as to what they observed about the injured person as compared to before their accident.
Aside from the more obvious physical pain you may experience from your accident, it is also possible to include any mental or emotional anguish that you experience as a result.
When a person is involved in a traumatic car accident, they may have immediate and long-term physical pain. However, he/she may also experience anxiety or fear from the accident. They may be frightened of traveling in a car. They may be experiencing embarrassment or humiliation because the accident has left them debilitated or scarred.
The following are examples of mental or emotional suffering you may incur because of an injury:
Physical pain or emotional suffering from an injury may have a permanent and lasting effect on a person's life and livelihood. They can result in shortened life span, temporary or permanent limitations on activities, unemployment and unhappiness.
There are no absolute means of measuring a person's pain and suffering. There are also no real guidelines for weighing a plaintiff's pain and suffering to follow. Therefore, the plaintiff must simply try to proffer the best evidence of the effects his injury has had on him/her economically, physically, mentally, and on a daily basis.
If you have been injured due to another’s negligence, you have the right to fair compensation. Contact the personal injury attorneys of Moore·Faust Injury Law Group for a free consultation.
Contact Moore Faust Injury Law Group today to discuss your insurance claim with an accomplished South Dakota, Wyoming, and Nebraska injury attorney.
924 Quincy Street
Rapid City, SD
Copyright © 2023 MooreFaust - All Rights Reserved. A P.L.C. Moore-Faust Injury Law Group is a South Dakota Professional Law Corporation of Lawyers (Attorneys) registered with the South Dakota Secretary of State, practicing primarily in South Dakota, limiting their law practice primarily to claims against insurance companies, negligent individuals, and entities arising out of automobile accidents, truck accidents, bus accidents, pedestrian accidents, slip / trip and fall accidents, and wrongful death claims. A P.L.C. Moore-Faust Injury Law Group does not provide services relating to the diagnosis or treatment of injuries and their services are not endorsed by any medical doctor or doctors.
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