You'll have to go see a dentist for that information. I know this because my mother knocked out about 8 teeth from an auto accident.
Yes. Say that you were invovled in a 3 (or more) car accident, where one car stopped short, was rear-ended by your car, and then your car was rear-ended by the car behind you. Your insurance company would pay for the back of the car you hit and the front of your car. The insurance of the driver behind you would pay for the back of your car and the front of the car behind you.
I think this depends on the insurance company. When I was in an accident (I was at fault), the insurance company required my collision deductable up front before they started repairs on my car.
No, Medicare is not accident insurance. However if you are a qualified medicare recipient then it will cover the cost of health care in treating those injuries that resulted from an accident. It will not pay though for financial loss or liability damages resulting from an accident.
The adjective forms for the verb to determine are the present participle, determining, and the past participle, determined. Examples:The determining factor will be the cost.The determined cause of the accident is that your were traveling too close to the car in front of you.
You usually don't. That's why it is called an accident. Like when your front bumper meets the rear bumper of another car. If you plan it, your insurance will deny your claim.
It is camera that sticks to the car windshield to record your driving and the vehicles in front. It is useful in case of incident or accident. You can give the evidence to the Police and Insurance companies.
Typically that is the way it works, They car behind who hit your car pays for your damages and the car in front that you hit will be covered by your insurance.
Provided your premiums have been paid and your policy was in effect at the time of the accident, an automobile's liability coverage will pay for any property damage you do in an accident, even if you run your car into a store front or knock over a power pole. The policy will pay up to the limit of the liability portion of the policy.
Fault is typically determined by police reports and accident witness(es). In a rear end accident the vehicle striking another in the rear is typically at fault. With multiple cars it is up to the reporting police officer to determine fault.
The owner of the car that caused your damages will be responsible to pay damages to you unless you live in a no-fault state. In that case, your insurance pays for your damages.
no.not if its a car accident
I'm no dr but, probably if you had significant head trauma to the front or sides of your head (ear to ear) it MIGHT have caused it, odds are though that you already had it and it would have started showing up later but the stress from the accident and stress related to the accident (insurance, drs, court, etc.) probably just brought it on faster.