Personal-Injury
Filing a Claim For The Loss of Enjoyment of Life
In a personal injury claim, there are forms of damages that defendant is liable at. It is divided into two wide categories, namely, economic damages where it is a liability held by the at-fault side in which it involves objective, countable, and/or verifiable monetary losses such as possible total medical expenses, property loss, possible earnings lost, cost of amendments, repairs, and etc. While, non-economic damages on the other hand, are opposite to economic damages, wherein it involves non-tangible matters and has subjective values such as emotional turmoil, mental damages and trauma, physical disabilities, loss of companionship, injury to reputation, and loss of enjoyment of life. In this blog, we are going to discuss on what are the boundaries for filing a claim for the loss of enjoyment of life, its conditions, and other things that a reader should know when filing one. Loss of enjoyment of life is among the non-economic damages and is not similar with pain and suffering but is a consequence of one. Filing a claim for this is pretty tricky and requires attention to detail and consistency of cooperation between the victim and his/her lawyers. What is Loss of Enjoyment of Life? In general, loss of enjoyment of life is a wide term that is not directly caused by an accident but an after effect issue that arises from the effect of the recent accident. It comes from an inability to engage in certain activities that the victim normally do before the accident such as doing hobbies or working, usually from an event of sustaining an injury. But, filing for a claim for loss of enjoyment of life is not that easy as it should be due to a form of loss of function, pain, or other factors that could directly be a result from sustaining an injury or any form of damage to the body or mentally such as broken leg or spinal cord damages. What Other Manifestation of Injuries That Could Possibly Result in Loss of Enjoyment?
Spinal Cord Injuries Spinal cord injuries are often accompanied or related to spinal cord injuries. Spinal cord injuries symptoms could range from mild back pains to chronic back pains, paralysis, and even loss of motor functions.