The first step to making a claim is speaking to a trained person who can advise as to whether your claim is worth pursuing. This can be done easily. At National Accident Helpline, call centre staff can tell you whether they think you should speak to a solicitor. They can then put you in touch with one in your area to progress your claim.
If you have been injured and want to speak to one of National Accident Helpline’s staff, call 0800 376 0150. Alternatively visit www.national-accident-helpline.co.uk.
Tens of thousands of British
workers suffer from industrial diseases caused by using hand held vibrating
machinery as part of their jobs.
Machinery such as chainsaws
and pneumatic and power drills can cause Vibration White Finger, which is the
vascular component of Hand Arm Vibrating Syndrome, or HAVS.
While doctors are not
completely sure as to exactly how the vibrations in the machinery cause HAVS,
it is thought that they cause small but repetitive injuries to blood vessels,
which accumulate over time.
About 10 per cent of workers
who use vibrating machinery are believed to suffer from HAVS. It is a type of
Raynaud’s Disease, and it causes <a href="http://www.national-accident-helpline.co.uk/personal-injury-claims/vibration-white-finger-claims.html">white fingers</a>, numbness and tingling. It is
important not to underestimate the negative effects that the condition can have
on sufferers – an attack of the illness can last for hours at a time and can
put a painful end to leisure activities.
What are the symptoms of Vibration
White Finger? They include a person’s fingers turning white and a loss of
grip strength. In cold weather the effects can often be worse and the injury
becomes even more painful as blood begins to return to the fingers, causing
them to turn red or even blue.
Often victims of Vibration
White Finger are tempted to play down the condition, believing it to be a minor
disease – but in fact it is an injury that can develop until it affects whole
fingers. People have also begun to develop it years after they stopped using
the machinery itself.
Often the painful symptoms
are brought on not while actually using the machinery, but in cold or wet
situations. It is believed coffee, cigarettes and some other drugs can
exacerbate the condition, while exercise and keeping warm can help to keep the
symptoms at bay.
Women should be particularly
careful as they have nine times more chance of developing the condition than
men.
HAVS and Vibration White
Finger hit the headlines after the Government launched a compensation programme
for former miners who had developed the disease. By 2004 more than £100 million
had been paid out.
The example demonstrates
that compensation is available and, if you use vibrating machinery as part of
your job and have not been made aware of the possible side effects that you
could well have a case to make a compensation
claim.
Sometimes compensation can
be the only way to recover lost earnings and to help to recover from the stress
that the disease inevitably brings with it.
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