The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Medical & injuriestidy-crane-097

Insurer wants my 7-months-pregnant wife to sign a full injury release for almost nothing — don't do it, right?

Hey everyone, hoping to get some perspective here because my gut is screaming that something is off and I need a sanity check.

About three weeks ago my wife and I got rear-ended pretty hard at a stoplight by someone who clearly wasn't paying attention. My wife is 7 months pregnant. She got checked out at the ER the same night — cervix looked fine, baby's heartbeat was strong, no contractions — so we were relieved. But the OB wants to keep monitoring her over the next few weeks just to be safe.

Here's where it gets weird. The at-fault driver's insurance already reached out and they're offering a pretty insulting lump sum to close out all injury claims — for both my wife and the baby — and they want her to sign a full release with indemnity language. Basically, once she signs, that's it. No coming back if something shows up later.

I've been reading about how pregnancy complications from trauma don't always show up immediately. Placental issues, premature labor, developmental stuff — some of this can surface weeks down the line or even after birth. How is anyone supposed to know right now that everything is totally fine?

We're not desperate for the money. We'd rather wait and make sure mom and baby are genuinely okay before closing anything out.

Has anyone dealt with something like this? Did you push back? Did the insurance company just... wait it out with you? I'm also wondering if we even have the right to just say "we're not signing anything yet" without it affecting the property damage claim for the car.

Any thoughts appreciated. This is stressful enough without feeling like we're being rushed into something permanent.

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9 replies

  • 6
    daring-grouse-360

    Do NOT sign that. I was in a collision and felt totally fine at the scene, signed a quick release because I thought it was just about the car, and about six weeks later I had herniated disc symptoms that my doctor directly linked to the crash. I had zero recourse. Your situation is way more serious with a baby involved — please wait.

  • 12
    calm-finch-737

    The fact that they're moving this fast should tell you everything. Insurers don't rush paperwork because they're trying to help you — they rush it because they want to close exposure before you figure out what you're actually entitled to. A small quick offer on injury claims for a pregnant woman is a massive red flag. They know the potential liability here is significant.

  • 14
    plain-grouse-719

    I used to work claims and I'll be straight with you: when a file involves a pregnant claimant, the directive from above was almost always to close it fast and cheap if possible. The adjuster contacting you isn't your friend, even if they sound sympathetic on the phone. That release language is almost certainly broad enough to cover the baby too, not just your wife. I'd read every word very carefully before even considering it — and honestly I'd just refuse to sign anything until after the birth and a clean bill of health.

  • 21
    cool-stoat-191

    Not legal advice, but this is a situation where a quick free consult with a personal injury attorney is genuinely worth your time. Releases signed before all potential injuries have manifested — especially in pregnancy cases — are exactly the kind of thing lawyers flag immediately. The property damage claim and the injury claim are typically separate, so don't let anyone imply you have to bundle them. Just my two cents.

    • 7
      clear-stoat-504

      You can absolutely decline to sign the injury release while still processing the vehicle property damage separately — those are two different claims and you don't have to resolve them together. Just make sure that's explicitly clear in any communication with the insurer. Put it in writing if you can: something simple like "we are not prepared to resolve the injury portion of this claim at this time." Keep records of everything.

  • 13
    humble-grouse-810

    From a medical standpoint, three weeks post-accident is way too early to know everything is fine in a pregnancy. Placental abruption can present subtly, and there are stress-related complications that can emerge closer to delivery. Your OB monitoring her is the right call, but "still looks okay so far" is not the same as "no complications from this accident." Please don't let anyone pressure you into signing off on her health before she and baby are fully in the clear.

  • 13
    swift-hare-576

    Honestly just reading this made me anxious for you guys. Please don't let them pressure you. You're going to have a baby in a couple months — that's what matters. The money will still be there to negotiate after you know everyone is healthy. No amount of pressure from an insurance company is worth gambling with that.

    • 3
      curious-rider876

      Wish I had seen this a month ago — would have saved me a lot of stress.

  • 18
    patient-owl-150

    Simple answer: don't sign it, don't call them back without knowing your rights first, and talk to a PI lawyer before you do anything else. Most of them do free consultations for exactly this kind of situation. You're not being difficult — you're being a parent.