This year the
	American Automobile Association (“AAA”) issued a report on the high costs of the traffic and congestion we have
	 here in the United States. We tend to think of traffic in terms of how
	 much longer it will take us to get where we are going, and how much more
	 we will have to pay for gasoline while we are sitting, and certainly that
	 is a high cost of traffic here in the Atlanta metro region. According
	 to the report, however, the still higher cost of traffic is the
	car accidents that happen because the roads are clogged with vehicles.
	In the report,
	AAA report 2011.pdf, AAA listed the various costs that result from a traffic accident. Some
	 of the costs are the type that can be recovered in a
	car accident lawsuit. Since I am a
	car accident lawyer, I am discussing those types of costs first. Yet other of the costs hit
	 society more broadly.
So far I have discussed property damage (the damage to the cars and sometimes
	 to the roadway structures from the car accident), lost earnings (the amount
	 of money lost because the person who was injured in the car crash could
	 not work), lost household production (the chores that the family had to
	 pay someone else to do while the injured person was recovering from the
	 effects of the car wreck), and what probably amounts to the single greatest
	 dollar cost – the medical bills and expenses for the person who
	 was injured in the car accident.
	Today I want to discuss two additional types of damages that AAA describes
	 and that are recoverable in a
	car wreck lawsuit.
	* Pain and lost quality of life.  In legal terms, a
	car accident lawyer refers to this type of damage from a car accident as “pain and suffering.”
	 These types of damages are hard to quantify, but they are very real. For
	 example, if a person’s leg is so badly injured in a car wreck that
	 it has to be amputated, the cost of the surgery will be significant. But
	 the cost of the surgery will pale in comparison to the shock and despair
	 that the person will feel when he wakes up and realizes that his leg is gone.
I have represented a number of burn victims. These clients were burned
	 when their fuel tanks leaked as the result of a car accident. The cars
	 and trucks these clients were in caught fire and exploded. Several of
	 these clients were burned over 70% of their bodies. The excruciating pain
	 of these clients truly could never be described. Some of these clients
	 died, but the pain they underwent before they died was included as part
	 of the damages in the wrongful death lawsuit that I brought on their behalf.
	* Vocational rehabilitation. After a car accident, many people recover and are able to go back to the
	 employment they had before the car wreck. Depending on the injury and
	 the person, however, some people who are receive
	serious personal injuries in a car accident may not be able to return to the jobs they held before the wreck. For
	 example, a surgeon who has a
	brain injury may lack the steady hands he had before the car accident. A construction
	 worker who suffers a severe
	spinal cord injury probably cannot return to construction work of any type.
In each of these cases, the person needs vocational rehabilitation to be
	 able to find employment that he will be able to do. Sometimes the person
	 will need who was injured in the car accident can return to the same kind
	 of employment he had earlier, but he will need some rehabilitation and
	 help figuring out how he can do the old job with his new limitations.
