Should You Use Your Health Insurance for Medical Expenses After A Car Accident?

If you’ve been injured in a car accident, you will probably seek medical attention for your injuries. This costs money. Who should pay the medical bills?

If you have health insurance, you’re lucky. You can rely on your health insurance provider to cover the costs of your medical bills. However, some doctors may try to make you pay out of pocket, especially if they discover that your injuries were as a result of a car accident.

Shouldn’t the At-Fault Party’s Insurance Provider Pay My Medical Bills?

When an accident occurs, the at-fault party is typically liable for the damages resulting from the accident. These damages include cost of repair or replacement of property as well as medical fees related to the treatment of injuries suffered by other parties. However, these cases are more complex than that.

The insurance provider for the at-fault party often will not pay your medical fees until you complete your treatment. This may sound like a bad thing at first. However, it ensures that you are refunded fully for all your medical expenses.

It can also take a long time to get your compensation from the insurance provider. Doctors and hospitals won’t be willing to wait for that long for their payment. It therefore makes sense to get your own insurance provider involved even if the accident was someone else’s fault.

Pursuing Compensation

It is advisable to seek medical attention immediately after the accident. This is not only important for your own health but also when filing your claim. It is important to document injuries that have resulted from the accident and seek medical attention for them.

When you have fully recovered, you can begin to pursue compensation from the at-fault party. It is important, however, to take note of the statute of limitations for your case. If you haven’t fully recovered, you can still file a claim if the statute of limitations is approaching.

If the defendant doesn’t have enough insurance cover to compensate your medical expenses and other damages or if you live in a no fault state, you may have to file a claim against your own car insurance policy.

Compensating Your Health Insurance Provider

It is advisable to have your insurance provider pay your medical bills. If you are compensated for the medical expenses following your accident, then they may have the right to seek reimbursement from you. The insurance provider however, ought only to be paid what they paid out. Not all insurance providers however, seek reimbursement.

Auto Accident Claims and Insurance Companies

Auto accidents are some of the most common personal injury accidents. While they are not an unusual occurrence, statistically speaking, they are a frightening and life-changing event for victims. Every auto accident case is unique, and our Charlotte personal injury attorneys understand that for you and your family, this is a very difficult time. We are here to help you every step of the way.

Insurance Companies

Auto accident victims are often tempted to give into the insurance companies when they offer only a portion of what they should be paying. Insurance companies use several tactics to avoid justly compensating accident victims.

  • Denying claims. The insurance company may try an outright denial of your claim. This is most common in low impact accidents involving soft tissue injuries and little or no vehicular damage.
  • Delaying claims. There are two reasons that the insurance company hopes to benefit from delaying your claim. First, you may recover or significantly improve over time. This will not change the cost of your medical bills, but it will make you look less sympathetic to the jury. Second, f it drags out long enough you may be desperate enough to take whatever they offer you just to get some of the bills paid.
  • Underpaying. The insurance company may offer payment very early in process, hoping that you will not realize how much your accident is really going to cost you. Or, they may wait until they have delayed your claim and you have given up hope that they will pay at all.

If you or a loved one has been injured in an auto accident, please call our Charlotte personal injury attorneys or submit an online questionnaire. The initial consultation with our personal injury lawyers is free of charge, and if we agree to handle your case, in most cases we will work on a contingency fee basis, which means we get paid for our services only if there is a monetary recovery of funds. In many cases, a personal injury lawsuit must be filed before an applicable expiration date, known as a statute of limitations. Please call right away to ensure that you do not waive your right to possible compensation.

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