Accidents can cause pain and hardship
But now we have to feel guilty about claming compensation
If you think that Government spin stopped with Tony Blair leaving
office, think again. The coalition is spinning like a top about
accident claims and, in the process, whipping up prejudice against
those who bring personal injury claims.
The prime minister has said he wants to ”wage war”
(something recent prime ministers seem to do rather a lot) against
an all-pervasive compensation culture. All good tub-thumping stuff,
but which simply ignores the Government’s own research evidence.
This found that, in fact, there is no such culture in the UK. To
be able to claim compensation, any accident victim has to show that
the accident was someone else’s fault, that they have been
injured (which has to be proved by a medical report from an independent
specialist doctor or medical consultant) and that they have suffered
loss. If they can’t show this, they won’t be paid a
penny, despite what you might read in the newspapers to the contrary.
Narrowing the attack even more, the government is now demonizing
victims of whiplash injuries, suggesting that in many cases where
a claim is brought, there is no such injury. So, imagine you are
driving home one night. You stop at traffic lights. Someone driving
a car behind you is driving too quickly and not paying attention.
Their car rams into yours. You are taken unawares. Your head snaps
backwards, hits the seat rest and jerks forward. Sometime later
the symptoms emerge. You have headaches, nausea, stiffness and lack
of mobility. Your neck is affected, but your back could be too.
You can hardly move. The symptoms could last a few days or a few
months. All these are medically recognized symptoms. In the legal
text book which sets out details of reported accident cases there
are over 200 pages dealing with successful whiplash claims, so it
is hard to see where the government is coming from in doubting its
existence.
So, still imagining you have had this injury, how are you going
to feel if when you want to claim back your lost earnings because
you could not go to work, the cost of prescriptions for painkillers,
the excess on your car insurance policy for the repairs, let alone
compensation for the pain and suffering, you are made to feel like
a benefits cheat or a shoplifter, as if what you were doing was
somehow wrong?
All anyone wants, in these circumstances, and all the law allows
them to receive, is to be put back in the position they would have
been in as if the accident had not happened. So there is no profit
element. Ask accident victims if they would have preferred not to
have had the accident in the first place or to have had it and been
paid some compensation, most would chose not to have had the pain,
distress, inconvenience and cost. Hardly a compensation culture,
Mr. Cameron.
http://thelincolnite.co.uk/2012/02/lincoln-lawyer-the-uk-compensation-culture-fallacy/
Personal Injury
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