Your Connecticut brain injury lawyer can press your Connecticut case
Facts on brain injuries indicate that 1.4 million citizens suffer a traumatic brain injury in this country annually, including many in Connecticut. Of those, about 50,000 citizens perish, about 1.1 million are treated in an emergency room and released, and about 235,000 citizens are hospitalized. Overall, an estimated 5.3 million citizens in America have a long-term or even lifelong need for living assistance due to a traumatic brain injury. Such Americans may need a knowledgable Connecticut brain injury lawyer for help.
TBI, or traumatic brain injury, can manifest itself in various ways. First, the injury must be explored through evaluations using an MRI, CT or other imaging equipment. These may impart information on moderate to severe TBI, which can be manifested by sensory loss, paralysis, seizures, weakness, lessened muscle control, memory deficiencies and eating, speaking and sleeping disorders. The severe extreme of a TBI includes coma. Insurance providers may dispute that these problems were due to a TBI, but your Connecticut brain injury attorney can advocate in the legal realm for you and your family members in this situation.
Information from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control indicate that annually 50,000 people will die in the United States due to TBI, or traumatic brain injury. Moreover, such injuries lead to long-term disabilities for 80,000 individuals. Such injuries are normally caused by an external physical force against the brain which leads to a lessened or altered state of consciousness. Such injuries are 1.5 times more likely to occur in men. Vehicular collisions and falls together account for 48 per cent of such injuries, and those falls often are caused by another person's wrongdoing. An experienced Connecticut brain injury attorney can pursue just and fair compensation in these instances.
Some brain injuries are not diagnosed until long after an accident. That is largely because victims who visit an emergency room and don't show gross signs of brain damage, such as swelling, hemorrhaging or contusion, may not have their brain injury diagnosed in the ER. It may only be later that the brain injury becomes clear. Often it takes special tests to diagnose a brain injury, and these are not available in an ER. Such tests can include a CT scan or MRI. But some brain damage may be microscopic, requiring even more exacting tests. At whatever point when you or a loved one realize that there has been a brain injury, contact a knowledgeable Connecticut brain injury lawyer immediately.
A brain injury in Connecticut and throughout America customarily is extremely complicated. Due to that fact, medical response to a brain injury may be very prolonged. The starting treatment can be surgery, and beyond that brain injury sufferers may embark on years of occupational and physical therapy. When you have an experienced Connecticut brain injury attorney, you can ascertain to what degree extended therapy is required and then fight for fair and just monetary compensation from those accountable for the brain injury.
DISCLAIMER: Jim S. Adler & Associates is not licensed in Connecticut. Nonetheless, the law firm does work with outside counsel and local counsel to litigate claims for Connecticut as needed.
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