Accidental death and dismemberment is one kind of insurance that may pay for this loss. Also, some life insurance policies provide for the payment of part of the proceeds in a situation like this. However, in many cases, the insured may have to have sustained the loss of more than one limb or bodily function (such as eyesight, coupled with loss of a limb) to recover.
Disability insurance is another possibility if the loss of the limb renders the insured unable to work. This is more complicated, as it depends greatly upon the type of disability policy involved and the functional incapacity sustained by the injured person.
Accidental Death or Dismemberment
did you know people eat toilet paper in prison so they wont starve..........
Accidental death and dismemberment is one kind of insurance that may pay for this loss. Also, some life insurance policies provide for the payment of part of the proceeds in a situation like this. However, in many cases, the insured may have to have sustained the loss of more than one limb or bodily function (such as eyesight, coupled with loss of a limb) to recover. Disability insurance is another possibility if the loss of the limb renders the insured unable to work. This is more complicated, as it depends greatly upon the type of disability policy involved and the functional incapacity sustained by the injured person.
This type of insurance is kind of like an ARM mortgage. You pay low premiums for a set time, but then they increase after that.
The insurance arm does but not the airline or holiday package arm.
Your Health insurance.
An arm is what you used to type the question. The hand is what I used to type this answer.
A stroke.
NO WC income may or may not have been taxable, and may or may not have been withheld on when it was paid. It depends on the specific WC program and what the particular benefit is for. (Payments for loss of a body part, say an arm or such, aren't taxable - they just are to replace your loss. But payments for loss of income, which would have been taxable had you worked for it - certainly are taxable still). It also matters if the "insurance" was paid for by you or the employer. You will receive a 1099 saying what type of income yours was and what if anything was already withheld.
The loss of nerve innervation to the affected limb.
its a type of animal
Well, if there was a most common reason for you dying by cutting your arm off, it would be: excessive amount of blood loss. If you have something to cover up your arm, or tighten it, and make it less of blood loss, then you will be 'ok' for a little while, but eventually you would need to get to the ER
Skeletal muscle is associated with the upper arm.
To reduce too much blood loss.