Disability & Life Insurance and ERISA Attorneys
Doing What’s Right For Greater Colorado and the Rocky Mountain Region
Disability & Life Insurance and ERISA Attorneys
Doing What’s Right For Greater Colorado and the Rocky Mountain Region

How do permanent injuries affect a lawsuit?

On Behalf of | Jan 12, 2021 | Long-Term Disability, Personal Injury

Most successful personal injury claims in Colorado cover costs that pay for your medical care and lost wages until you’re ready to go back to work. However, a permanent injury can’t be covered with a set of limited costs. You’ll require medical care for the rest of your life, and it is difficult to determine how much that will cost. How could your attorney figure out how much money you’re owed in a settlement?

How does a permanent injury affect your claim?

Your attorney who builds your case will have to take multiple factors into consideration. Dealing with a permanent personal injury can be challenging because it’s impossible to measure how your life would have been different if the accident had never happened. However, your attorney could try to estimate the damages as much as possible.

Future loss of wages is one factor that your attorney may take into consideration. This is the amount of money that you could have earned until retirement age if you hadn’t been injured. Your attorney might also consider your age because younger people have more years to live with their disability. While pain and suffering can be difficult to measure, your attorney could gauge your emotional distress as a result of the accident.

They might also consider facial disfigurement, especially if you formerly worked in a field that placed a high value on your appearance. Finally, your attorney may consider the severity of the disability itself. This includes the costs of any medical treatment that you might require during the rest of your life span.

How can you build a personal injury case?

An attorney could help you build a case against the individual, business or manufacturer that’s responsible for your injuries. For a successful lawsuit, you’ll have to prove that the other party was directly responsible for your disability.