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Issues relevant to a private home accident injury claim
Issues relevant to a private home accident injury claim
Issues relevant to a private home accident injury claim by
John Patterson.-6647
Accident injury claims in the homeMost people probably don't think
about the dangers of facing an accident injury claim being made by
a visitor to their own home.
Yet this is a very real possibility. While a compensation claim
certainly has the potential to sour friendships, there is no real
reason why one should. Usually, the insurers of the residency where
the accident occurred will pay out any compensation arising out of
the injury claim, meaning there need not necessarily be any
financial loss incurred by the home-owner.
Looking at these kinds of personal injury claims from an objective
viewpoint is a useful exercise. If someone has suffered pain,
injury and financial loss through no fault of his or her own,
seeking compensation is a perfectly reasonable thing to do.
People have been doing this for thousands of years. Many eminent
historians argue that the existence of a system of monetary
compensation is a good indicator of a civilised society.
The Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents (ROSPA) have long
been trying to drive the message home that accidents in the home
represent a real danger to everyone and that people should be doing
more to lessen their likelihood.
They report that every year, 4,000 people are killed in accidents
in the home. Further to that, hospitals report that 2.7 million
people each year turn up at accident and emergency wards seeking
treatments for injuries sustained in the workplace. While only a
small percentage of these resulted in accident injury claims,
enough of them did for the total compensation claim cost to run
into millions of pounds.
A personal account
I must admit that I do, in fact, have a personal interest in this
subject. Nearly ten years ago I was at a friend's school graduation
party. There were around 15 of us at Ella's family home, so it was
a pretty low key affair.
The celebration had been put on by my friend's parents. To mark our
graduation and our burgeoning adulthood they had even laid on some
beers and wine for us to drink. This was despite the fact only
around half of us had reached 18 the legal drinking age.
Ella's best friend, Jenny, was there. She was of a very slight
build and, at that stage, had virtually no experience of drinking
alcohol. Pretty soon she was friendly, cheerful and effusive, but
by no means completely drunk.
As it approached midnight, Jenny decided it was time for her to go
home, so she phoned her parents to ask for a lift. What she hadn't
noticed was that Ella's parents had only recently closed the
sliding glass doors.
The fact that these glass doors had no markings to indicate their
presence, coupled with Jenny's tipsiness meant she failed to notice
them so crashed through the glass as she walked towards the phone,
sustaining severe cuts to her face and arms.
Ella rushed over to and tried to stem the flow of blood with
several t-shirts, while I called emergency services.
Eventually, Jenny turned out to be alright, although she did need
some corrective cosmetic surgery to minimise the effect of scarring
to her face.
Funding of both the her surgery and the counselling Jenny needed to
help her recover from the trauma of the incident cost her parents
quite a lot of money; money they didn't really have.
This was part of their motivation for making an accident injury
claim.
I would be lying if I said that this didn't sour the atmosphere
between the two families for a while. However, nearly a decade on
Jenny and Ella are again really close. So close, in fact, that
Jenny was recently bridesmaid at Ella's wedding and Ella's husband,
he's none other than Jenny's big brother.
This article may be published on another website free of charge, on
the condition that a link is provided from this article to our
website:
http://www.youclaim.co.uk/personal-injury/contacting-personal-injury-solicitors-for-glass-injuries.htm
John Patterson, YouClaim are the leading online personal injury
compensation claim people with an excellent claim success rate.
Call 0800 10 757 95 or visit
http://www.youclaim.co.uk/personal-injury/contacting-personal-injury-solicitors-for-glass-injuries.htm
for more details.
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