The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Property damagespry-seal-563

Blacked out at the wheel and totaled my car — insurance is being weird about it

Still kind of shaken up writing this, honestly.

So last week I was driving home from a routine errand — nothing exciting, middle of the afternoon, totally familiar road I've driven a thousand times. I'd been fighting off a nasty sinus infection for about two weeks and my doctor had me on a new antibiotic. What I did NOT realize was that one of the side effects was sudden dizziness.

I felt fine when I got in the car. Then out of nowhere I just... wasn't there anymore. Next thing I know I'm coming to with the front of my car wrapped around a concrete barrier on the side of the road. Airbags deployed, hood completely crumpled, windshield cracked in a spiderweb pattern. A woman walking her dog had already called 911 and was standing at my window.

Ambulance came, I got checked out at the ER — mild concussion, some bruising from the seatbelt, nothing broken thank god. The car is a total loss according to the body shop.

Here's where it gets frustrating: my insurance adjuster basically implied that because I was the only one involved and there's no other driver to point at, they're treating this like it's some kind of "gray area." They asked me like four times whether I had been drinking (I hadn't, it was 2pm on a Tuesday and I was on antibiotics??).

I don't even know what I'm asking exactly. Has anyone dealt with a single-car accident with a medical cause? Do I have any recourse for the totaled car? Should I be worried they're going to try to deny this? I have full coverage.

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10 replies

  • 14
    wise-newt-685

    I had something similar happen — not medication but a sudden blood pressure drop — and the adjuster grilled me the same way. It felt so dehumanizing when I was already scared and hurt. The key thing that helped me was getting a letter from my doctor documenting the medical episode ASAP. Once that was in the file the tone of the whole conversation shifted. Get that documentation now if you haven't already.

    • 15
      patient-fox-545

      Just want to clarify something — did the ER or your doctor actually document the dizziness as being caused by the antibiotic specifically, or is that your own conclusion? I'm not doubting you at all, but there's a difference between "patient reported dizziness" in a chart and a physician actually connecting it to the medication. That linkage is going to matter a lot to the insurer.

    • 6
      soft-spoken-co-pilot140

      Exactly my experience. Persistence paid off in the end.

  • 12
    clear-newt-210

    Okay so I used to work claims and I can tell you exactly what's happening: they're checking for any possible exclusion they can lean on. The alcohol questions are routine, but the subtext is also "was this a medical condition you knew about and drove anyway." If this was a brand new prescription and you had no prior warning of dizziness, that works in your favor. Make sure your pharmacy records and the prescribing date are available — that timeline matters more than people realize.

    • 11
      tidy-swift-180

      I'm so sorry this happened to you. The fact that you're even coherent enough to write all this out after a concussion is impressive. Please don't go through this alone — is there someone who can help you deal with the insurance calls while you're still recovering? Having a second set of ears on those conversations can make a huge difference.

  • 8
    brave-seal-883

    That "gray area" comment is a red flag to me. Adjusters use vague language like that to buy time and soften you up before a lowball offer or a denial. Full coverage means comprehensive and collision — collision should cover a single-car accident regardless of cause. Don't let them make you feel like you did something wrong for getting dizzy from a prescribed medication.

    • 1
      weathered-late-shift875

      Adding this: keep copies of every email. It mattered for me.

  • 8
    clever-stoat-237

    Not legal advice, but if your insurer starts pushing toward denial or a lowball ACV offer on the total loss, it may be worth at least a free consultation with a PI attorney. Some handle first-party insurance disputes, not just multi-vehicle accidents. The fact that you have full coverage and a documented medical cause is actually a decent position to be in — just don't sign or accept anything until you understand what you're agreeing to.

    • 16
      spry-finch-772

      Three things to do right now: (1) Get written documentation from your doctor confirming the medication side effect. (2) Pull the prescription fill date to prove when you started taking it. (3) Stop answering the adjuster's questions casually over the phone — ask for everything in writing going forward. You're not being paranoid, you're just protecting yourself.

  • 6
    spry-sparrow-560

    Please make sure you're following up on that concussion diagnosis. "Mild" doesn't mean nothing — symptoms can show up or worsen in the days after the initial incident. Headaches, trouble sleeping, sensitivity to light, mood changes — all worth flagging to your doctor. Don't let the insurance stress distract you from actually taking care of yourself right now.