September 28th, 2009

Compensation has finally been awarded to a girl who was the victim of an electric shock while on holiday.
Alexandra Miles, then 11, had travelled with her family to the four-star Kilifi Beach resort in Kenya in 2005, the Daily Mail reports.
The family had been worried about power cuts and water shortages during their stay, but on Christmas Day, Alexandra was given a near-fatal electric shock by the shower in the hotel room.
She sustained trauma to her heart and was left partially paralysed.
The family took legal action after the hotel only offered a free meal in compensation for the child’s injuries and a payout of £52,000 has now been agreed.
"We were terrified we were going to lose our only child. It was just appalling," commented Alexandra’s mother Joanna.
Anyone affected by an injury while abroad should seek legal advice, as they may be able to claim compensation from their package tour holiday operator.

Tags: Alexandra, Christmas, Christmas Day, Daily Mail, Electric Shock, Four Star, Heart, Holiday Operator, Hotel Room, Joanna, Kenya, Kilifi, Legal Advice, Package Holiday, Tour Operator, Trauma, Victim Compensation, Water Shortages
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March 23rd, 2009

Compensation of £52,000 has been awarded to a man who developed the lung disease mesothelioma after being exposed to asbestos.
According to the BBC, the compensation was secured under new legislation which enables people to claim if they were exposed to the deadly building material while self-employed or from another person’s clothes.
A minimum of £8,197 is payable under the new Child Maintenance and Other Payments Act, brought into force last year, but the unnamed victim in this case secured almost the maximum of £52,772.
Statistics from Cancer Research show that five times more men than women develop asbestos-related diseases, potentially due to them having had more jobs in the building trade during the 20th century.
Meanwhile, new research published in the British Journal of Cancer has stated that as many as one in 17 British carpenters born in the 1940s could die from mesothelioma after their exposure to asbestos.

Tags: 1940s, 20th Century, Asbestos Cancer, Asbestos Diseases, Asbestos Related Diseases, Bbc, British Journal Of Cancer, Building Material, Cancer Research, Cancer Victim, Carpenters, Child Maintenance, Clothes, Jobs, Lung Disease, Mesothelioma, New Legislation, Statistics, Victim Compensation
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November 20th, 2008

Compensation has been awarded to the family of a man who died after he was hit by a car.
Tony Gate, a highways worker, was struck by a vehicle being driven by 28-year-old Julie Verrall in 2003 as he put out roadworks signs, Hartlepool Today attests.
Although he survived the crash, he was left with serious brain damage and spent three years in a vegetative state in a nursing home before dying from pneumonia in 2006.
No criminal charges were brought against the driver, but Mr Gate’s family took legal action against her insurers.
They have now agreed to take some responsibility for the incident and have agreed on an undisclosed sum of compensation in an out of court settlement.
Linda Hughes, Mr Gate’s sister, said she was pleased with the new development.
"Tony was never able to tell us what happened on that day and now we feel the final piece of the puzzle has been found," she commented.
According to the Department for Transport, 2,943 people were killed on Britain’s roads in 2007.

Tags: Accident Compensation, Accident Victim, Brain Damage, Car Accident, Court Settlement, Crash, Criminal Charges, Family Car, Family Man, Linda Hughes, Nursing Home, Piece Of The Puzzle, Pneumonia, Signs, Spent Three, Undisclosed Sum, Vegetative State, Victim Compensation
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