The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Insurancecandid-elk-329

My partner has severe anxiety and can't deal with insurance — can I just handle it for him?

Looking for some guidance here because I feel completely stuck.

My partner was rear-ended about two months ago — totally not his fault, the other driver even admitted it at the scene. The damage to the back of his car is pretty significant, but it's still technically driveable so he's been limping along with it.

Here's the problem: he has severe anxiety disorder, diagnosed, the real deal. Phone calls with strangers are genuinely debilitating for him. We're not talking nervous — we're talking physical symptoms, dissociation, the whole thing. He managed to file the initial claim online back when it happened, but every time we get to the next step (returning the adjuster's calls, scheduling the estimate, etc.) he just shuts down completely. I don't say that critically — I've watched him try. It's painful.

I want to handle this FOR him. I've been with him four years, I know every detail of the accident, I have access to all the paperwork.

My questions: 1. Can I just call the adjuster and say "I'm calling on behalf of [partner]" and have them talk to me, or will they refuse? 2. Do we need something formal like a power of attorney, or is there something simpler? 3. Is there a way to keep everything in writing (email, text, portal) so he never has to get on a phone at all?

The claim is already open — we're just stuck in limbo on actually getting the car fixed. Any experience with this would be really helpful. I don't want him to lose out on what he's owed just because the process is phone-heavy.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 20
    plain-grouse-751

    Please don't overlook the fact that untreated anxiety this severe is genuinely affecting his quality of life in a lot of ways, not just this claim. I know you said he's resistant to medication, and that's his right — but there are non-medication options too (certain therapy approaches have strong evidence for anxiety disorders). I know that's not what you asked about, but as someone who sees how anxiety compounds after traumatic events like accidents... it might be worth gently revisiting that conversation at some point.

    • 6
      gentle-passenger201

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 14
    calm-fox-181

    You're a really good partner for doing this. A lot of people would've just pressured him to "push through it" and that would've made everything worse. The fact that you're problem-solving around his needs instead of against them says a lot.

  • 11
    steady-marmot-604

    Just heads up — adjusters are trained to gather information, and sometimes having a third party speak for someone can get used against the claimant. Like if YOU say something slightly inconsistent with what was in the original claim, they might flag it. I'd keep any calls short and factual — just logistics, not relitigating the accident. Don't volunteer extra information.

    • 7
      quick-crane-727

      Step 1: Have him send one email to the adjuster with your name and your contact info, saying you're handling this for him. Step 2: You take over. That's genuinely probably all it takes. Don't overthink it.

  • 10
    hearty-grouse-006

    Is his anxiety disorder formally documented anywhere — like with a doctor or therapist? I only ask because if the insurer does push back on the third-party arrangement, having some kind of documentation that he has a medical reason for needing accommodation could help. Also wondering if his own insurance company (not the at-fault driver's) has been involved at all — sometimes going through your own insurer first is easier.

    • 8
      hopeful-parent275

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?

  • 8
    genuine-otter-135

    I dealt with something similar after my accident — my mom handled basically everything because I was in bad shape physically and mentally. What worked for us was having me send a quick email to the adjuster saying something like "I authorize my mother [name] to speak with you on my behalf regarding claim #XXXXX." Just one sentence from the actual claimant in writing seemed to unlock everything. The adjuster never pushed back after that. Might be worth trying before going full power of attorney route.

    • 17
      brave-heron-032

      So the written authorization email approach the person above mentioned is legit and often works in practice. Technically insurers aren't required to talk to a third party, but most will if the policyholder/claimant puts something in writing — even a short email or a signed letter — saying you're authorized.

      A formal power of attorney is more airtight and gives you broader authority, but it takes more steps to set up. For just getting a car repaired through an open claim, a simple written authorization is usually enough. If this drags on or gets complicated (like a liability dispute or injury claim), then I'd look into something more formal.

      Also — check if the insurance company has a claimant portal. A lot of them do, and you can upload documents, message adjusters, and schedule things entirely in writing.

    • 16
      daring-hare-514

      Former adjuster here. Honestly, we dealt with this kind of situation more than people realize. Written authorization from the claimant — even just a forwarded email from the claimant's address saying "please work with [your name] on my behalf" — was almost always sufficient for us to proceed. We didn't want to make things hard for people, we just needed some documentation for the file so our supervisor couldn't come back at us later. The portal option is also real — push hard for that. Some adjusters will try to insist on a phone call but there's usually a way around it if you escalate politely.

    • 5
      curious-survivor438

      Really glad you posted an update — gives the rest of us some hope.