Thanks allI've never been through this before. In Norway, since we have national health and full coverage for disability, there's rarely any insurance compensation. Here you have to cover those things via a kind of market negotiation scene that I'm not used to. It should help to have a ballpark figure in mind when they call with the offer next week.
Your comments all sound reasonable and helpful, giving me kind of a top and bottom figure with a bit of leeway. That'll help me get a sense of whether the insurance company is being fair. My sense so far is that they're fair enough, but also that they have routines to pressure you to accept a settlement. Such as ... even though they've accepted that they're going to have to cover my medical expenses, they won't pay any bills until treatment is completed. If I were economically on the brink here, and maybe also worried about my credit rating, that would put pressure on me to stop treatment a soon as possible, maybe sooner than medically advisable. Luckily, I can afford to wait, but I also have to make sure that doesn't entail me giving the company an interest-free loan for the 6 months it's taken. I.e. gotta factor in interest on the bills I've paid.
So far it seems I was "lucky". I don't think the neck sprain will give me lasting problems, at least not as long as I keep up the excercizes. I'll have to ask the PT how long I'm likely to need to keep them up. They take 1/2 hour a day, which I think it's fair that I calculate at my wage level for a time, but after a while it becomes just something it's wise to do because I have a desk job and from that point it's not really an insurance matter. Also the lasting effects of the eye injury are minor; I just need a bit more light. So I guess if I get compensation that at least covers the accumulated bills, the time I've lost from writing (about 2 weeks counting time when I couldn't work, time spent on medical follow-up, and exercize time), an extra lamp or two, something extra for that first week of severe pain and for those winter months when I was suddenly afraid of driving at night ... that should do it. If this means I can afford a bike that really fits like a glove (i.e. less stress on the neck and shoulders), and also contribute something extra to my Mom's new car, I won't feel like I'm being unreasonable.



I've never been through this before. In Norway, since we have national health and full coverage for disability, there's rarely any insurance compensation. Here you have to cover those things via a kind of market negotiation scene that I'm not used to. It should help to have a ballpark figure in mind when they call with the offer next week.
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