How much is my pain and suffering worth?

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How much is my pain and suffering worth? Definition of Pain and Suffering When you are involved in an accident, you may have been injured. An injury may cause damages, which are split into economic and non economic damages. An economic damage, or special damage, is a calculable damage. Special damages include the amount of medical bills you have as a result of the accident and any loss of income you have as a result of the accident. This is a calculable damage because you can calculate or add the expense. For example, if your physician bill is $1,200 and your MRI bill was $2,000, you can calculate your medical expense damage to equal $3,200. A non economic damage is a damage that is not calculable. In personal injury claims, the non economic damage an injured person has is generally known as pain and suffering damages. You can’t plug pain and suffering damages into a calculator. The pain and suffering damage one has is determined on a case by case basis. The value of the pain and suffering damages is the amount of money a jury would accept in exchange for having to endure that pain and suffering. For example, if your pain rates a 6/10 on a pain scale for 90 days, the amount of money a person would accept to go through that pain for that duration of time is the money value of your pain and suffering damages. As per CACI jury instruction 3905A, pain and suffering damages include past and future physical pain, mental suffering, loss of enjoyment of life, disfigurement, physical impairment, inconvenience, grief, anxiety, humiliation and emotional distress. How To Prove You Had Pain and Suffering When you make an insurance claim against the person who negligently caused your injuries, their insurance company will request proof from you that you had pain and suffering. The first way to prove you had pain and suffering is to show the insurance adjuster your medical records for medical treatment you received because of the accident. The medical records will detail the subjective complaints you told your doctor on each of your medical appointments. It will detail your pain levels that you complained of, the effect your injuries had on your activities of daily living and your clinical examination findings. Activities of daily living are defined as routine activities that people do every day. They include, but are not limited to, sleeping, walking, getting dressed, taking a bath, eating, working and driving. If you can show that your injury has affected your ability to perform any activities of daily living, then you can prove that you had pain and suffering because of the accident. Your injury may affect your activities of daily living in two ways. First, you may still perform certain activities of daily living, but not as well as before the accident. For example, you may still able to get dressed, but it may be more difficult because of the pain and discomfort you have. The second way an injury can affect an activities of daily living is that you can’t perform certain activities at all. For example, you may not be able to exercise anymore because of your injury. Pain and suffering awards are higher for persons that can no longer perform activities of daily living compared to still being to perform activities of daily living, but with difficulty.


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