The
Association of British Insurers (ABI) is developing a habit of selecting certain areas
of legal work. It then launches attacks on the integrity of both victims and
their advisers. The latest target are workers who have been exposed to
excessive noise at work and suffered hearing loss as a result.
They are
reportedly seeking a ‘crackdown’ on such claims using tactics that they successfully
used in relation to ‘whiplash’ claims. They say that out of 200,000 claims
submitted less that one fifth were eligible for compensation. That tells us
nothing about the genuineness of victims. It tells is that there are lawyers are
submitting claims which they have not properly screened and for which neither
they nor their client will get paid. It might even identify some lawyers who should not be dabbling in specialised work.
Their
spokesman James Dalton refers to a similarity between concerns over
medical evidence in relation to deafness and whiplash claims. In fact they
could not be more different. Medical evidence in relation to whiplash injuries
is by nature subjective. It is not always possible to verify the extent of a purely
soft tissue injury.
Noise
induced hearing loss is capable of very detailed objective assessment. A
carefully prepared audiogram alongside a history of working with noise provides
a clear basis to pursue a claim. In many cases I could tell you if the hearing
loss is likely to be caused by noise.
The only
similarity to whiplash cases is that insurers don’t like them.
The report
goes on to complain that costs can heavily exceed the value of the claim. In
saying this they ignore the behaviour of insurers –
In this
earlier blog I talked about a case where the insurers decided to throw the
kitchen sink at our client’s case. I think the hope was that the costs would become
so high that we would lose our nerve. The case settled for £4.5k and the costs
were eventually agreed at £69k. This was a case that should have settled early
at a fairly modest cost. Why is this the victim’s fault?
There is
something disturbing about these ‘reports’. The ABI seems to be intent on
defeating genuine claims by the back door. Rather than go through due process,
they rely on the support of a government, which consistently gives them what
they want.
There is no
evidence at all to support this move.
But you can
be sure that we will soon be reading tabloid headlines referring again to a
mythical ‘compensation culture’. Rules will follow that will seek to restrict
the rights of workers.
There are
many battles ahead.
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