Injuries at “Low Speed Impacts”

 Impacts that occur at speeds less than 10 MPH are known as “low speed impacts”. There is usually little (if any) visible property damage done to the rear of ones motor vehicle. However, the occupants of the vehicle that is struck (especially in the rear) often have injuries, especially neck injuries. The most common of them are identified as “Whiplash”.

Injuries to the low back are also common. The occupants cannot brace themselves nor force their back and neck against the seat or headrest. If the person is sitting at a light when the impact occurs, they may be leaning forward. Unlike the “crash test dummies” most people are not sitting completely erect when the crash occurs. Although most bumpers are built to withstand a low impact (with limited visible damage) the body gets snapped around and the body sustains “Soft Tissue” injuries – - including bruises, plus chest and rib injuries.

Often, insurance companies will deny that there is a personal injury claim when there has been little property damage. The reasoning for not paying the claim is often based on the idea that if the car is not damaged, how could the occupant be? The human body is not built like a vehicle. Unlike factory standards of the cars coming off assembly line, every body is different is size, shape and pre-existing conditions that affect the outcome of a crash. If you need help navigating a personal injury claim on a low impact collision, contact a Florida personal injury lawyer.

 

You are driving in Florida, when a car behind you rear-ends your vehicle. The impact pushes your car forward. It takes your body about 100 milliseconds to catch up to the forward movement. You step on the brakes, bringing the car to an abrupt halt. The sudden stop throws your head and neck backward, and they bounce against the headrest. In a matter of seconds, you’ve experienced whiplash.
Following a whiplash injury, you may experience headaches, neck aches, shoulder pain, ringing in the ears. One in three people will experience TMJ, pain in their temporo-mandibular joint, within one year according to a study by Hanna Sale and Annika Isberg, Delayed Temporo-mandibular Joint Pain and Dysfuntion Induced by Whiplash Trauma, 138 J. Am. Dental Assn. 1084 (2007). This is at an incidence rate of five times higher than what is found in the general population.

If you have had a whiplash accident, your first step should be to seek immediate medical assistance. Treatment of whiplash depends on the wide variety of symptoms present.

You may need a lawyer to help recover the costs of your medical treatment. We can help. Michael E. Seelie , board certified trial attorney, has been helping injured people in Jacksonville, Florida for over 30 years.

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