Monday, 21 January 2013

Whiplash is not only limited to car accidents

One of the small joys in life is to get a really wet towel, twist it into a tight knot, and flick it like a whip on the backside of friends. Many a towel fight has been started by such crazy antics that children all the way to grandparents engage in it from time to time.

While whipping a towel may be fun, having the same thing happen to one’s neck is probably the last thing anyone would consider enjoyable.

Whiplash is also termed Cervical Acceleration-deceleration. As the name implies, the part that is whipped accelerates and decelerates rapidly. This sudden start and stop action can severely affect the bones, muscles, and nerves of a person’s neck.

This type of injury has become so common with the widespread adoption of the automobile that 430,000 people filed whiplash injury claims in the year 2007 alone.

While many people commonly associate whiplash with drivers and passengers of cars and trucks, most are surprised to learn that it is also present under other conditions where sudden stops are experienced.

Window cleaners may experience whiplash with a sudden drop. Airline pilots can be subjected to it during a particularly hard landing, or worse, during a crash. Football players can suffer it after colliding with a goal post or another player. Even a pedestrian may experience this when struck by a moderately fast moving vehicle.

The problem with this type of injury is that it does not always make itself apparent immediately. For some, it can take, days, weeks, months, or even years before any of the symptoms develop. This is the main reason why neck braces are attached to accident victims, even if there is no definite sign of whiplash at the accident site.

Some may consider being wheeled out in a gurney or pushed while in wheelchair with a neck brace to be a theatrical attempt to gain sympathy or increase the chances of winning whiplash injury claims. But in reality, medical practitioners realise the importance of immobilising the neck of patients before transporting them.

Diagnosing this type of injury includes taking x-rays to make sure that patients have not sustained any fractures to their neck bones. In additional to this, a thorough study of the patient’s history is also done, to rule out any past injuries which may complicate any new ones.

Once the injury has been confirmed and the reason as to how it was sustained has been clarified, the information provided can be part of the basis for whiplash injury claims.


Monday, 14 January 2013

Understanding the Psychology of Whiplash Claim Solicitors



Violence and Morbidity

There is no reason for you to shirk away from telling your whiplash claim solicitors all the details of your injurious accident, no matter how gruesome they may be. For the truth is that personal injury lawyers, through their experience and education, have long been inured to the violence and morbidity that necessarily surrounds their trade and specialization. You should not obviate from telling your personal injury lawyer, for example, how your car crash contorted you upper body and nearly cracked your neck or how your falling onto the floor smashed your face, as well as over-extended your upper back.

Furthermore, this is all for your own good. The reason is that important facts may be buried underneath the details that you understandably are disgusted at and uncomfortable in telling. For instance, it might be the case that the defendant could be prosecuted quicker had you only told your personal injury lawyer that while driving, you crashed your head because the defendant was overspeeding. By not mentioning the circumstance that accompanied your having crashed your head, that is to say, the defendant’s overspeeding, you would have omitted a highly imputative piece of evidence. Many other examples will bear this out. Thus, you should be aware that your lawyers will appreciate your telling them everything you can about your case, even those details that appear to you to be too gory and brutal to be in good taste. 

 Effects of Occupation on Our Personality

It is true that what we do as a job will have some effects on our personality. By working as a teacher, for example, we could improve our confidence in speaking in public and our capacity for empathy, especially for people younger than us or who we perceive to be less intelligent or mature than us. By working as a man of business, to give another example, we would grow shrewder every day and learn how to adjust our attitudes and beliefs according to the interests not just of morality and humanity but also of expedience and practicality. In what way, following the same line of inquiry, can our being whiplash claim solicitors, to give a final example, change our personalities?

Now the question is important to ask because so many prejudices against personal injury lawyers abound in the public opinion. It has been argued that because of their constant exposure to violence, gore, and morbidity, such lawyers have become too jaded to feel any strain of humanity left and have degenerated into walking reasoning machines, machines because their feelings, as has been sad, have long been withered by their trade.

This is simply wrong. Personal injury lawyers’ characters can, although be jaded, still retain enough room for sympathy and humanity. The reason is that they understand that their being lawyers makes them officers of justice. Aside from this, they know too that they are more human than others because they make their living on the most human instruments of all, our capacity for speech, logic, and eloquence.