Reviewing Early Settlement Offers

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Reviewing Early Settlement Offers

Early settlement offers should be reviewed against medical prognosis, future care, release language, and available insurance coverage.

Jason HicksJanuary 8, 20265 min read

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  1. Medical Prognosis Comes First
  2. What to Compare Before Signing
  3. Maximum Medical Improvement (MMI)
  4. Conclusion

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Early after a crash, an insurance representative may offer a fast settlement before the full medical picture is clear.

Any release should be reviewed carefully because it may affect future medical bills, wage-loss claims, and the ability to bring additional claims later.

Medical Prognosis Comes First

Some injuries, including neck, back, brain, and soft-tissue injuries, may require follow-up care before prognosis is clear.

Before signing a Release of Liability, review whether imaging, specialist referrals, work restrictions, future procedures, or permanent impairment issues remain unresolved.

Once a release is signed, it may resolve claims even if later treatment becomes more involved than expected.

What to Compare Before Signing

A settlement offer should be compared against the available records, coverage, liability proof, and medical evidence.

  • Medical status: Diagnosis, prognosis, future treatment, and impairment questions.
  • Economic loss: Wage loss, work restrictions, transportation, and out-of-pocket costs.
  • Release terms: Which claims and parties the settlement would release.

The main risk is deciding before the record is developed enough to evaluate the claim responsibly.

Maximum Medical Improvement (MMI)

Maximum Medical Improvement (MMI) is often an important valuation marker because it helps clarify whether symptoms, restrictions, or impairment may be long-term.

Some cases can be evaluated before MMI, but serious injury cases usually require enough medical development to understand future care and functional loss.

Conclusion

An early offer may be reasonable in some cases and incomplete in others. The decision should be made after reviewing medical records, liability evidence, insurance coverage, and the release terms.

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About the Author

Jason Hicks is an Oklahoma trial lawyer handling civil-rights, wrongful-death, catastrophic-injury, trucking, bad-faith insurance, and high-value negligence litigation. His work includes police and jail civil-rights cases, major injury matters, and evidence-driven litigation across Oklahoma.

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