Can I Sue For Emotional Distress After a Car Accident?
Yes you can sue for emotional distress after a car accident. As an injured accident victim, you can sue for all types of damages, including medical bills, lost wages, and pain and suffering. Emotional distress is a type of non-economic damage. Injured accident victims need a lawyer on their side who can fight for these types of damages and ensure maximum compensation after a car accident. Need Legal Help? Let’s talk.
Emotional Distress Following A Car Accident: What Does It Look Like?
Emotional distress after a car accident can take many forms. To claim compensation for emotional distress from a car accident, you will need to start with identifying the specific emotional stress stemming from your car accident. For example, if you were diagnosed with depression before the car accident, and it does not change after the car accident, it is unlikely you will be able to recover compensation for the costs of treating it. On the other hand, if you have newly diagnosed depression after a car accident, you may have the right to be compensated for emotional or psychological distress.PTSD
Post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD, occurs following a traumatic event. The chaos of a car accident can easily feel traumatic for anyone. The sudden collision of the vehicles, the crunch of metal, and the pain of the accident itself are all terrifying, mentally scarring events. The mental and emotional suffering may only grow for people trapped in their vehicles, especially if the vehicle remains in the middle of traffic or the accident extends the victim’s exposure to other health and safety hazards. PTSD can manifest as a variety of symptoms. Often, PTSD victims go to strenuous lengths to avoid being reminded of the car accident. For some people, that means not going past the location where the accident took place, which might be on the most direct way to their work and other locations they frequent. For others, it may mean not being able to get in a car at all. In its most extreme form, PTSD involves flashbacks about the accident, in which a trigger sends a victim back to that time and forces them to live through it all over again. PTSD can make it difficult to do anything that involves getting behind the wheel of a car or even riding along in a vehicle as a passenger. It can also interfere with daily life in other ways, such as causing painful or uncomfortable symptoms at even the sight of a car or the location where the accident took place.Anxiety
People may have new or increased anxiety after a car accident, feeling unexpectedly tense, worried, or upset, often about relatively ordinary, everyday situations. Anxiety can cause fear of getting into a car as you worry you might suffer serious injuries. You may do your best to avoid the places or situations that trigger those feelings, but still find them steadily increasing after your car accident, especially if you do not work through them with a qualified therapist. Often, the anxiety that stems from a car accident might seem, on the surface, to have little to nothing to do with the car accident itself. You may not understand why, for example, you feel so uncomfortable going into a crowded area, or why you jolt at sudden loud noises. However, these triggers often relate back to the accident itself in some way. Unfortunately, many everyday phenomena can trigger anxiety related to a car accident, disrupting everyday life in unexpected ways.Depression
Major depressive disorder, also known as depression, can be completely debilitating, snuffing out all motivation a person has to go about their life. After your car accident, victims may start to feel as though things will never get better, as though their injuries have completely upended their lives and left them with nothing to enjoy. Many struggle with a lost enjoyment of life following serious car accident injuries. Physical injuries from a car accident often make it very difficult for a victim to interact normally with other people at a time when they need the support of others more than ever. Victims may, for example, feel reluctant to engage with friends and loved ones, especially those who do not seem to understand what the victim is going through. Depression can impact a victim’s ability to sleep, eat, or perform at work. Many people with depression feel sapped of energy and unable to get themselves to go about normal tasks. An experienced therapist can diagnose PTSD, anxiety, and depression and determine whether or not they are tied to a car accident. Having those conditions diagnosed by a medical professional is often crucial to establishing your right to compensation for pain and suffering after your car accident.Claiming Compensation For Emotional Trauma After A Car Accident: An Overview
Can you claim compensation for emotional trauma after a car accident and seek compensation for it? Yes. However, the steps that you take both immediately after the car accident and in the weeks and months that follow will impact your ability to recover compensation for emotional distress after a car accident.First, Always Contact a Lawyer
You had a car accident, it wasn’t your fault, and now you find yourself anxious all the time. The anxiety has a substantial impact on your ability to work, and you now worry about seemingly normal things that would not have triggered anxiety before the accident. Your psychiatrist, psychologist, or social worker can tie your anxiety to your car accident. Whether you suffered physical injuries in the car accident or not, you need an attorney to help you navigate your claim. Most car accident claims include several key elements of compensation. Alongside compensation for medical expenses, including medical expenses related to psychological injuries, you might claim compensation for pain and suffering and emotional distress or mental anguish. An experienced car accident attorney will know how to pursue compensation for all of these injuries. That’s why you must frankly talk with your attorney about all of the harm you experienced because of the car accident—physical and emotional harms alike. Explain to your attorney the nature of the emotional distress you suffered, any diagnoses you have received, and all of the challenges you now face in life. Even if you did not suffer physical injuries, you still have the right to claim compensation for any emotional distress you suffered. Car accidents can become distressing for many reasons, including the mental and emotional trauma of being placed in such a dangerous situation and of dealing with the aftermath and disruption to your life. However, if you do not have any serious physical injuries, you may find it harder to recover compensation for your emotional harm. This is why it is critical to have an attorney on your side who will know what evidence to gather and how to make your case for emotional distress damages. Your emotional distress claim may hang heavily on an attorney’s ability to show:- That you suffered that emotional distress from the car accident (rather than from some other circumstance); and
- That your emotional distress, including PTSD, anxiety, or depression, left a significant impact on your life or your finances.