Brain injuries represent some of the most serious and life-altering personal injuries a person can suffer. Whether resulting from motor vehicle accidents, workplace incidents, slip and fall accidents, or other traumatic events, traumatic brain injuries can have profound consequences for victims and their families. The Law Offices of Greene and Lloyd understands the devastating impact these injuries have on your future, quality of life, and financial security. Our team is committed to holding responsible parties accountable and securing the compensation you deserve.
Brain injuries often involve substantial medical expenses, lost income, and diminished earning capacity that extend far into the future. Insurance companies frequently underestimate the true cost of lifetime care and rehabilitation for brain injury victims. Legal representation ensures your claim reflects the actual value of your damages, including medical expenses, lost wages, pain and suffering, and long-term care needs. Our firm fights to secure fair compensation that addresses your present needs and protects your financial future through comprehensive damage assessment and aggressive negotiation.
Traumatic brain injuries range from mild concussions to severe, permanently disabling conditions. Even injuries initially considered mild can develop into serious complications including cognitive dysfunction, memory problems, personality changes, and chronic pain. Brain injuries may result in immediate symptoms or manifest gradually over time, making diagnosis and documentation crucial for legal purposes. Understanding how your specific injury occurred and how negligence or responsibility played a role is essential to building a strong legal case.
An injury to the brain caused by external force, such as from a vehicle accident, fall, or blow to the head. TBIs can range from mild concussions to severe injuries causing loss of consciousness, permanent disability, or cognitive impairment.
The legal failure to exercise reasonable care that results in harm to another person. In personal injury cases, proving negligence requires showing that a defendant’s actions or inactions directly caused your brain injury.
The monetary compensation awarded to an injured person to cover medical expenses, lost wages, pain and suffering, and other losses resulting from their injury. Damages in brain injury cases often include lifetime care costs.
Legal responsibility for causing harm or injury. Establishing liability means proving that the defendant was at fault for your brain injury and therefore responsible for compensating you.
Even if symptoms seem minor, seek medical evaluation immediately after any head injury or accident. Prompt medical documentation creates an important record linking your symptoms to the incident. Early diagnosis and treatment improve outcomes and strengthen your legal case with documented evidence of injury.
If safely possible, document the accident scene with photos showing hazards, lighting conditions, or circumstances that contributed to your injury. Collect contact information from witnesses who can support your account of events. Preserve any physical evidence related to the incident before it disappears or conditions change.
Insurance companies often extend quick settlement offers that fail to account for long-term consequences of brain injuries. Allow your medical condition to stabilize and consult with an attorney before accepting any settlement. Understanding the true extent of your injuries ensures you receive fair compensation rather than accepting inadequate amounts early.
When brain injuries result in permanent disability, ongoing care needs, or significant lifestyle changes, comprehensive legal representation ensures you pursue maximum compensation. These cases require extensive documentation of future medical costs, rehabilitation, and lost earning potential over your lifetime. Full legal representation involves expert testimony, life care planning, and aggressive negotiation to secure settlements that reflect the true cost of your injury.
When multiple parties may be responsible for your injury, determining liability becomes complex and requires thorough investigation. Construction site accidents, vehicle collisions involving multiple vehicles, or workplace incidents may involve several potentially liable parties. Comprehensive legal representation ensures all responsible parties are identified and pursued to maximize your total recovery.
If your brain injury is minor with obvious recovery trajectory and liability is completely clear, a simpler claims approach might suffice. These cases typically involve minimal ongoing treatment and straightforward compensation calculations. However, even minor head injuries warrant careful monitoring and documentation.
If available insurance coverage clearly exceeds your documented damages and the at-fault party’s coverage is sufficient, you may not require extensive litigation. However, this requires accurate assessment of all your injury-related costs, both current and future. Consulting with an attorney helps ensure you’re not undervaluing your claim.
Car, truck, and motorcycle accidents frequently cause traumatic brain injuries when drivers and passengers strike their heads during impact. These accidents often involve clear negligence and adequate insurance coverage for pursuing claims.
Falls from heights, struck-by-object incidents, and equipment-related accidents in construction and industrial settings regularly cause serious brain injuries. These cases may involve workers’ compensation claims along with third-party liability actions.
Falls due to hazardous conditions, poor maintenance, or inadequate warnings can result in head trauma and brain injuries. Property owners and managers have legal responsibility to maintain safe premises and can be held liable for injuries.
The Law Offices of Greene and Lloyd brings years of dedicated service to brain injury victims throughout Washington. Our attorneys understand the profound personal, emotional, and financial impact of brain injuries on families. We approach each case with the thorough investigation, medical knowledge, and aggressive advocacy your claim deserves. We handle all aspects of your case while you focus on healing and recovery.
Our firm works on a contingency basis, meaning you pay no attorney fees unless we recover compensation for you. We invest our resources in investigating your case, consulting with medical and rehabilitation professionals, and building the strongest possible claim. Your success is our success, and we’re committed to holding responsible parties accountable for the injuries they caused.
Washington law provides a three-year statute of limitations for personal injury claims, meaning you have three years from the date of injury to file a lawsuit. However, acting promptly is crucial because evidence can disappear, witnesses’ memories fade, and medical documentation becomes harder to obtain. Contacting an attorney immediately after your injury protects your rights and ensures proper evidence preservation. Delaying your claim can also complicate the discovery of liability and may result in losing important witnesses or physical evidence. Insurance companies prefer claims filed quickly and are less likely to challenge well-documented claims filed soon after injury. If you’ve already waited some time, contact our office immediately to determine if your claim is still viable.
Brain injury damages typically include all medical expenses, including emergency care, hospitalization, surgery, rehabilitation, and ongoing treatment. You can also recover lost wages from time away from work during recovery and compensation for reduced earning capacity if your injury affects your ability to work. Pain and suffering, emotional distress, loss of enjoyment of life, and compensation for permanent disability are also recoverable. In severe cases, damages include lifetime care costs, assistance with daily activities, home modifications, and loss of consortium if your injury affects family relationships. Courts and juries recognize that brain injuries often have catastrophic long-term consequences requiring substantial compensation. An experienced attorney ensures all damages, both obvious and subtle, are included in your claim.
Proving liability requires demonstrating that another party owed you a duty of care, failed to meet that duty through negligence or intentional conduct, and directly caused your brain injury. In vehicle accidents, liability may be established through police reports, traffic violations, or witness testimony. For premises liability cases, you must show the property owner or manager knew or should have known about dangerous conditions and failed to correct or warn about them. Our investigation process includes reviewing accident scenes, analyzing police reports, consulting with accident reconstruction professionals, and gathering witness statements. In many cases, expert testimony helps establish causation and prove the at-fault party’s negligence. The strength of liability evidence significantly affects settlement negotiations and case value.
Delayed symptom onset is common with brain injuries because some symptoms develop gradually as swelling increases or secondary injuries occur. Symptoms like headaches, dizziness, memory problems, and personality changes may not appear for hours or even days after the initial injury. This delayed presentation doesn’t affect your right to pursue a claim; the injury date is when the incident occurred, not when symptoms appeared. Documenting when your symptoms began and how they progress is important for your case. Seek medical evaluation as soon as symptoms develop and inform medical providers about the original incident. Your medical records showing the progression of symptoms from the accident help establish the causal connection between the incident and your brain injury.
Washington follows a modified comparative negligence standard, allowing you to recover damages even if you were partially at fault, as long as you were less than 50% responsible for the accident. Your recovery will be reduced by your percentage of fault. For example, if you were 20% at fault and your total damages are $100,000, you could recover $80,000. Establishing your percentage of fault requires careful analysis of evidence, witness statements, and sometimes expert testimony. Insurance companies often try to assign excessive fault to injured parties to reduce claim values. An experienced attorney protects your interests by countering these arguments with evidence of the other party’s primary responsibility.
Brain injury settlements vary dramatically based on injury severity, prognosis, age of the victim, lost income, and long-term care needs. Minor concussions with full recovery might settle for $10,000 to $50,000, while moderate injuries with some permanent effects could settle for $100,000 to $500,000. Severe, permanently disabling injuries often settle for $500,000 to several million dollars. Median settlements don’t reflect what your specific case is worth because each injury is unique. Young victims with decades of lost earning potential and care needs typically receive larger settlements than older individuals. An attorney evaluates your specific circumstances, medical prognosis, and financial impacts to determine appropriate settlement demand amounts.
Immediately after a head injury, seek emergency medical evaluation even if you feel fine, as serious injuries may not show immediate symptoms. At the emergency room, ensure medical providers know about the incident causing your head trauma so they can perform appropriate testing and document the incident in your medical record. Loss of consciousness, severe headache, confusion, or vomiting require immediate emergency care. Preserve evidence by taking photos of the accident scene, collecting witness contact information, and documenting how you felt in the hours and days after the incident. Avoid discussing the accident on social media or admitting fault to anyone except medical providers and law enforcement. Contact an attorney promptly to ensure proper evidence preservation and claim filing.
Yes, medical evidence is essential for proving a brain injury claim. This includes CT scans, MRI images, neurological examinations, cognitive testing, and ongoing treatment records that document your injury and its effects. Some brain injuries show clear medical evidence through imaging, while others require neuropsychological testing or functional assessments to document cognitive changes. Doctors’ reports describing your symptoms, treatment received, and prognosis establish the causal connection between the incident and your injury. Insurance companies scrutinize medical evidence carefully, making thorough medical documentation critical. Your attorney works with medical professionals to ensure your medical records clearly demonstrate injury causation and severity.
Yes, you can file a claim while still receiving treatment, and in fact, doing so is often advisable to protect your legal rights under the statute of limitations. Filing your claim doesn’t prevent you from continuing medical treatment or pursuing rehabilitation. Your claim value can be adjusted as your condition stabilizes and your long-term prognosis becomes clearer. However, allowing your condition to stabilize somewhat before settlement negotiations helps ensure your settlement reflects your actual long-term needs. Your attorney monitors your medical progress and adjusts settlement demands based on updated medical information and prognosis. Continuing treatment while your claim proceeds ensures comprehensive medical documentation of your injury’s impact.
Workers’ compensation claims provide benefits for workplace injuries regardless of fault but typically cover only medical expenses and a portion of lost wages. Brain injuries that occur at work through employer negligence may allow a third-party lawsuit against a non-employer party responsible for the unsafe conditions. For example, if a construction company’s negligence caused your brain injury at another company’s workplace, you can sue that construction company. Third-party claims allow recovery of additional damages including pain and suffering and full compensation for lost earning capacity, which workers’ compensation doesn’t cover. You may be able to pursue both workers’ compensation and a third-party claim simultaneously. An attorney helps determine whether third-party claims exist in your situation and coordinates benefits between both sources.
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