How to Keep a Personal Injury Diary and Why
If you’ve been injured in an accident that wasn’t your fault, you might be considering or in the process of filing a personal injury claim. But remembering all the details — when did you begin treatment? When did the insurance adjuster first contact you? What were you doing when your condition started to worsen? — can be difficult.
A personal injury journal can help you track your progress and is an essential piece of evidence you can rely on to prove your injuries and their impact on your life.
Below, we outline the benefits of keeping a personal injury journal, provide tips on what to include, and always include a free template with your welcome email, to maximize your chance of success.
Why Keep a Personal Injury Journal?
It’s unlikely you’ll forget the critical details of a devastating accident, especially if it caused catastrophic injuries that affect you months later — and might continue to do so for the rest of your life.
But as the days, weeks, and months go by, it’s normal for things to become a little fuzzy. Your brain will even try to protect you from reliving the trauma by causing you to forget details — details that can make a massive difference in how much compensation you can recover from the liable party or whether you can claim at all.
Unfortunately, personal injury claims also take time. It can take months, even years, to receive a settlement, and even longer if negotiations fail and you decide to take your personal injury claim to court. You might feel confident now that you can remember the date of your accident, what time it happened, whether it was a clear day or raining, and what the road conditions were like, but those details will be a lot harder to recall months or years down the line.
A personal injury claim backed up by facts and evidence is a successful one, and that’s exactly what a personal injury journal is — evidence of the facts.
What to Include in Your Personal Injury Compensation Journal
An impactful personal injury journal that will support an accident claim comprises several sections:
Details about Your Accident
Your personal injury diary should document the undisputed facts about when and where the accident occurred and what you were doing before the accident happened.
Information about Witnesses and Anyone Else on the Scene
If you were in a car accident and the police arrived, this section should detail the badge number and name of the police officer who attended the scene and compiled the police report.
You should also include the details of any other drivers involved in the accident and anyone else (such as pedestrians) who witnessed the accident.
If you were injured in another type of accident, such as a slip and fall, there will still likely be witnesses, even if they didn’t see what happened but called an ambulance or observed your injuries.
Your Injuries
You should also document your injuries, including where they occurred on the body and their severity (for example, did you sustain a few bumps and bruises or more severe lacerations?). If you have photographs of your injuries, you should add them with the journal.
Your Medical Treatment
Even if you feel fine, you should always seek medical attention after your accident. Some injuries get worse over time — if they do, you can document this in your personal injury diary. Insurance companies may dispute when you sustained your injuries, arguing you were hurt later on in an unrelated event, so a successful claim can rest on proving you were injured in the accident. Your medical records, supported by ongoing documentation in your personal injury diary, can be invaluable.
In this section, note any scans or tests you had, how long you were in the emergency room or doctor’s office, what medication or exercises your doctor prescribed, and the medical bills you’ve incurred so far (don’t forget also to include the cost of transport or mileage to and from the hospital and any time missed from work).
Follow-Up Appointments
Your first visit to the doctor or hospital after your injury is unlikely to be your last. When you return for follow-up appointments, record the time and date, your progress, and what the doctor has recommended next.
Ongoing Symptoms
If you suffered a brain injury, do you have persistent memory problems? Do you regularly feel fuzzy or have a brain fog that affects your concentration? Do you struggle to communicate with friends and loved ones?
Use this section of your personal injury journal to report new symptoms as they occur, including the date and time and how they make you feel. If you’re in pain or your symptoms affect your quality of life, note it down or ask a friend or family member to do this for you as you dictate to them.
Your Limitations
Are there any activities you can no longer enjoy or do? Perhaps you used to enjoy gardening, but you can no longer tend the flowerbeds or use garden tools without severe pain, which affects your mental health and well-being.
Your personal injury attorney can use information about your limitations to negotiate additional damages for pain and suffering, which can be substantial.
The more information you can include here, the more compensation you could recover. Damages for pain and suffering, mental anguish, and loss of enjoyment are not easily quantified with receipts, invoices, and wage slips like medical bills or lost wages.
The more detail you can provide to illustrate when you feel anxious, grief, terror, pain, embarrassment, or distress and how these feelings impact you as you go about your day, the more leverage you have to negotiate a larger settlement. Also, were you unable to be of regular assistance or intimate with your partner due to the accident? Keep note of this in the journal.
Keeping a Personal Injury Diary: Keep Our Pain Journal Template
Keeping a personal injury journal after your accident is a must, but it’s easy to miss including helpful details or decide to skip a day when your injuries flare up and forget to record them later.
That’s why we’ve created a pain journal template we send with your welcome email.
Our personal injury journal template includes examples for all the information you need to document regularly, with helpful prompts to get you started.
We’ve designed this template to be practical, so when you can’t face making pages of notes, all you need to do is document your experience for a specific day and what, if anything, triggered it. Also note when there are high pain levels.
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Using the Pain Journal Template
There are different methods for what to include in your personal injury journal. The minimum should be kept and noted:
The Accident Overview
Document the facts of your accident, including when and how it happened, the immediate injuries you sustained, and who else was at the scene. Write as much as you like, whether you prefer jotting bullet points or writing a longer, stream-of-consciousness narrative.
The key here is not to overthink or censor yourself — the more information you can provide, the better. Even details you don’t think are worth mentioning could prove highly relevant to your personal injury claim, so if in doubt, write it down.
Pain and Symptoms
Document your injuries and symptoms and how much pain or discomfort they cause. You can assign each injury or symptom a score from one to ten, allowing you to monitor progress over time. You should also detail where the pain is, how it affects or limits you, and how often it occurs.
If you experience new symptoms over time, such as tingling in your limbs after a shoulder accident, write them down along with the date you first started experiencing them.
Weekly and Daily Journals
The Pain and Symptoms journal is where you can record how you feel daily and weekly.
You should include:
The medication you take — along with the dosage and frequency
The exercises your doctor or physical therapist has prescribed and whether they cause you pain
Your appointments, activities, and general routine.
You can also use your weekly and daily personal injury diary to record whether you can return to work, which can help your accident attorney recover your lost wages.
When you can return to work, you should continue using these forms to document whether you are on restricted duties and whether your symptoms worsen. These details can help you secure additional support or reasonable adjustments from your employer if your injuries prevent you from completing specific tasks and may yield additional compensation if your job role changes significantly because of your injuries.
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