How to go about your whiplash accident claims

Okay you have whiplash injury that is not your fault.

What is there to come next you may wonder?

The first step is to seek medical advice from your general practitioner or physician to ascertain whether or not you are in fact suffering from whiplash.

During this assessment the GP will likely ask you a few informal questions about the incident and will make a few brief tests to assess the range of motion on your neck.

After these brief tests the doctor will probably be able to tell you there and then if you have whiplash, in the event that you are in fact suffereing from whiplash injury you may find that it is in your interests to make a whiplash accident claim for compensation.

If this situation mirrors your situation, then conducting a simple search on either google or Yahoo can bring you the sites you are looking for in quite litterally no time at all, so get searching.

Most whiplash accident claims websites will feature a quick online form which you can fill out if you choose to, and then the nessesary legal representative can then get back to you at the time that you specify, and hopefully work towards beginning your claim for whiplash compensation should your case be agreed.

Once the injury solicitor contacts you they will then try to ascertain from your conversation whether or not there is a viable claim and whether or not it is worth it for the both of you to proceed with the case itself.

In many cases it is deemed that the case is definatley worth pursuing, which is good for both yourself and the injury solicitor that takes your case, and most injury solictiors will operate on a no win no fee basis, so that they only get paid if you get your whiplash payout.

Should the injury solicitor take on your case, this is an extremely good sign, as this is a sure-fire sign that the case will be a full success.

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This entry was posted on Monday, January 25th, 2010 at 8:49 am and is filed under Uncategorized. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

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