How to Handle Your Medical Bills After a Car Accident
How to Handle Your Medical Bills After a Car Accident
It does not take much of an impact for occupants of vehicles involved in a car accident to be injured. Even a minor "fender-bender" can exert enough force on drivers and passengers to cause injuries requiring evaluation and treatment by medical professionals. What starts out as a minor headache or an achy discomfort may turn out to be a serious, life-threatening injury unless you get medical care right away.Apart from putting your physical wellbeing at risk, failing to be examined by a doctor as soon as possible after a car accident can jeopardize your right to pursue a claim for compensation against a driver or other party whose careless or reckless conduct caused the crash. Claim adjusters for auto insurance companies will use the delay in seeking treatment to minimize the severity of your injuries in order to reduce the value of your claim.In some instances, claim adjusters may even use your delay in seeking treatment to prove that something happening after the car accident was what actually caused you to be injured. Either way, you could be stuck paying substantial medical bills while the at-fault party escapes being held accountable. Should injuries suffered in a car accident have you wondering how to handle your medical bills, here are a few suggestions that may help.Cost of medical care for injuries in a car accidentYou probably already know from routine office visits to your primary care physician how expensive medical care has become. Even when you have health insurance, you remain responsible for copays and deductibles.
Calculator and paperwork; image via Pxhere, CC0.
Hospital charges
Emergency department charges
Physician fees, including surgeons, anesthesiologists, and other specialists
Private or out-patient nursing services
Ambulance fees
X-rays, MRIs and other imaging and diagnostic testing.
Rehabilitation costs, including physical and occupational therapy.
Medical equipment, including wheelchairs and walkers
Prescription drugs.
No-fault laws: Some states enacted no-fault laws to limit personal injury lawsuits by restricting an accident victim's right to file a lawsuit to situations involving serious physical injuries or death. In exchange for limits on the right of injured accident victims to sue for damages, states with no-fault laws allow you to recover the cost of medical care by filing a claim through your own auto insurance policy.
Personal injury protection (PIP) and medical payments (MedPay) coverages: PIP and MedPay are coverages you add to your auto insurance policy in states that have no-fault laws. As a general rule, PIP coverage is mandatory while MedPay is optional. Both coverages pay your medical bills for injuries suffered in a car accident regardless of fault, so people use MedPay to supplement the limits of their PIP coverage.
Health Insurance: If you have health insurance coverage, it may be available to pay medical bills associated with injuries you suffer in a car accident when other insurance coverage is not available. There are two disadvantages to relying on your health insurance to pay medical bills from a car accident. The first is that you may be responsible to pay deductibles and copays. The other is that whatever medical bills your health insurance company pays must be reimbursed from any money you receive through a lawsuit against an at-fault driver or other party.
Workers' compensation: If you suffer injuries in a work-related car accident in a state with workers' compensation laws, you may be entitled to collect benefits, including payment of medical bills, from your employer's workers' compensation insurance company. However, if the accident was caused by a party other than your employer or a co-worker, the workers' compensation insurer has the right to recover benefits paid to you from money you recover in a lawsuit against the negligent third party.
About Jared Stern
Jared Stern is an experienced financial professional with six years of experience in the pre-settlement funding industry. After graduating from UC Berkeley with a degree in economics in 2014, Jared began his career in Morgan Stanley's mergers and acquisitions investment banking division. After working with another pre-settlement funding company for two years, Jared founded Uplift Legal Funding in 2017 to give injured plaintiffs a better choice in lawsuit loans.