Traumatic brain injuries (TBIs) can cause unpredictable and devastating effects. If you sustained brain or head injuries from an accident in Nevada, you may be able to recover compensatory damages for:
- Medical bills,
- Anticipated future medical expenses,
- Physical or occupational therapy,
- Long- or short-term care,
- Equipment,
- Lost wages,
- Lost earning capacity,
- Lost or reduced functioning, and/or
- Pain and suffering.
Depending on the case, you may be able to recover punitive damages as well. Proving the cause of brain injuries in Nevada often requires the help of both medical and legal experts.
In this article, our Nevada personal injury attorneys discuss what you need to know about traumatic brain injuries in Clark County and throughout Nevada, including recovering compensatory damages such as pain and suffering. Click on a topic to jump to that section:
- 1. What causes traumatic brain injury in Nevada?
- 2. What are the effects of traumatic brain injury?
- 3. What are the costs of brain injuries?
- 4. What compensation can I get for brain injuries in Nevada?
- Additional resources
1. What causes traumatic brain injury in Nevada?
Traumatic brain injuries can result from a wide range of physical impacts, including
- falls,
- car accidents, or
- sports-related injuries.
Some traumatic brain injuries are made worse when you do not seek medical treatment right away. Swelling of the brain or bleeding may have disabling or even fatal results hours or days after the initial trauma occurs.
Negligence is a common cause of many instances of TBIs. A Las Vegas attorney can evaluate whether your injury stemmed from negligent behavior.
For example, if you were injured by a drunk driver in Clark County, you can hold the driver liable as the at-fault party in a personal injury case. Or if you had a slip and fall accident at a casino, you can sue the casino for not maintaining safe floors or for inadequate warning signs.
Nevada sports injuries
The CDC reports that the number of student-athletes experiencing sports or recreation-related traumatic brain injuries has been increasing over the last decade.
One study indicates that concussions among high school football players have risen 300% between 1998 and 2008. Children and adolescents take longer than adults to recover from concussions and sub-concussive injuries and consequently are more at risk of serious injury from repeat head trauma.
Nevada state law requires schools to remove athletes from play if they have a suspected head injury. Those athletes are required to meet “return to play” guidelines before participating in another game.
Players must also receive written clearance from a medical professional in order to return to play. In recognition of the over 60,000 concussions experienced on the football field each year in the United States, Nevada has also started mandating that school personnel be educated about traumatic brain injuries.
Chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE)
One of the most difficult illnesses to treat relating to traumatic brain injury is called “chronic traumatic encephalopathy,” or CTE. Patients with CTE experience mood and behavioral disturbances as well as cognitive impairments.
The majority of people who experience CTE—including boxers and football players as well as combat veterans—have had repeated concussions or sub-concussive injuries. CTE can be diagnosed only by autopsy, which means family members of Nevadans with CTE may not understand the true extent of the person’s injuries until after they pass away.
If you believe you or a loved one may be experiencing the symptoms of CTE after repeated head traumas, you should consult with a qualified neurologist for medical attention. Then seek out a personal injury lawyer to help make sure that you and your family receive a fair settlement for the losses you have suffered due to your TBI.1
2. What are the effects of traumatic brain injury?
Even serious brain injuries may seem somewhat minor when they first occur. Plus trained doctors and nurses can have a hard time figuring out whether a brain injury is serious or not.
Short and long-term effects
Some of the effects of head injuries are acute—that is to say, they last for only a short period of time. The acute effects of a head injury can include:
- Pain at the site of the injury.
- A “dazed” feeling.
- Pupils that are unevenly dilated.
- Memory loss (either short- or long-term).
- Loss of consciousness.
- Visual disturbances.
- Seizures.
The long-term effects of head injuries can be extremely unpredictable. Some people may be affected forever by cognitive or mood changes. Others could lose sensation, sight, or hearing.
Still others may not feel dazed or confused or even in pain from their head injury. It is important to note that for some victims of head injuries—even people who will have significant long-term effects—there may be few or no noticeable immediate effects.
If you have sustained a significant impact that involved your head moving suddenly (whether or not it hit a hard surface), it is best to get checked out by a physician.
Repeat head trauma
One of the most significant risk factors for significant brain injury is repeated head trauma.
Some Clark County residents have careers or play contact sports that involve a high risk of brain injuries. While a single concussion is unlikely to be serious, the same cannot be said for continued head injuries.
Nevadans who have been concussed repeatedly may develop lifelong brain injuries. These injuries may have unpredictable effects on mood and behavior. In some situations, brain injury carries devastating or even lethal psychological consequences.
3. What are the costs of brain injuries?
Costs associated with long-term debilitating traumatic brain injuries can reach into the millions. Some TBI cases require:
- repeated surgeries and
- lifetime medical treatment.
As a brain injury victim, you may also be unable to work or to continue working in the same profession, making your financial losses even greater. You can even lose abilities or senses that significantly impact your ability to enjoy life.
In many cases, the person at fault for causing your traumatic brain injury can be held liable. Nevada laws allow you to seek full compensation for your injuries. This includes:
- not only the costs that you have already incurred, like existing medical bills,
- but also your expected costs and losses in the future.
Currently, there is no current cure or single fix for traumatic brain injury. Unfortunately for Nevadans who fall victim to traumatic brain injuries today, some symptoms—which may be physical, psychological, or both—may persist for a lifetime.
4. What compensation can I get for brain injuries in Nevada?
When you are injured through someone else’s negligence in Nevada, you are entitled to compensation. You can also recover money if your brain injury occurred because someone else was reckless or intentionally hit you.
An experienced Las Vegas brain injury attorney may be able to help you recover money damages that go beyond your current medical bills.
For example, you can be compensated for decreases in your quality of life or loss of employment. You are also entitled to compensation for your expected future medical bills.
Often brain injuries will have lifelong medical consequences, and some of them can be very expensive. You may also be entitled to compensation for long-term care or to help you learn new skills.
Pain and suffering
If you are a TBI victim, you may be entitled to recover for “non-economic” damages under Nevada law.
“Non-economic damages are those not related to your actual out-of-pocket costs. They include recovery for:
- pain,
- suffering,
- inconvenience,
- physical impairment,
- disfigurement and
- other non-pecuniary damages.
There is no set amount a jury can award for pain and suffering damages in Nevada. In making an award for pain and suffering, a jury may award any non-economic damages it finds to be just and reasonable in the light of the evidence.2
Exception: If your brain injury resulted from medical malpractice (professional negligence), there is a cap of $430,000 for non-economic losses as of 2024.3
The cap on non-economic damages was approved by Nevada voters in 2004 as part of a medical malpractice reform ballot measure called the “Keep Our Doctors in Nevada” initiative. The Nevada Supreme Court has upheld this cap on non-economic damages as constitutional.
Note that the pain and suffering damages cap for Nevada medical malpractice cases increases with each year:
Year | Medical negligence damage cap in Nevada |
2024 | $430,000 |
2025 | $510,000 |
2026 | $590,000 |
2027 | $670,000 |
2028 | $750,000 |
Starting in 2029, the cap will increase by 2.1% annually.4
Punitive damages
Punitive (“exemplary”) damages differ from damages meant to compensate you for economic and non-economic losses. They are meant, instead to:
- Punish wrongdoers who behave in a reckless or malicious manner, and
- Set an example to deter others from engaging in similar behavior.
Punitive damages in Nevada are in addition to the damages you receive for your out-of-pocket (“compensatory”) and non-economic losses.
In general, under Nevada law punitive damages are capped at:
- Three times the amount of compensatory damages awarded to you if the amount of compensatory damages is $100,000 or more; or
- Three hundred thousand dollars if the amount of compensatory damages awarded to you is less than $100,000.5
The cap does not apply, however, when an injury results from:
- A defective product,6
- The emission, disposal or spilling of a toxic, radioactive or hazardous material or waste,7 or
- The wrongful actions of a driver who has willfully consumed alcohol and/or drugs.8
You are legally entitled to compensation whether the person who injured you did so carelessly, recklessly, or intentionally.
Do not sign settlement paperwork without legal advice
Insurance companies would love nothing more than to have you sign papers without talking to a licensed Nevada traumatic brain injury lawyer. Consulting with a personal injury law firm in Las Vegas, NV can mean the difference between a quick but inadequate payout and the full amount your case is worth.
That is because there may be injury-related expenses you had not yet considered—or because the initial settlement offer is very low compared to settlements reached in similar cases. Experienced Clark County attorneys can help you evaluate any brain injury settlement offer fairly—and often can improve it considerably.
Talking to an attorney does not necessarily mean you will be going to court on your personal injury claim. In most cases, your Las Vegas lawyer will still reach a settlement agreement with the insurance company. It will just be a settlement that keeps all your needs in mind—both in the short term and the long term.
Just do not wait to law to seek out a Las Vegas brain injury lawyer. The statute of limitations to file suit is only two years, and your legal team needs time to gather your medical records and craft the best case possible.
Additional resources
For more in-depth information about traumatic brain injury cases, refer to the following scholarly articles:
- Lawsuit and Traumatic Brain Injury: The Relationship Between Long-Lasting Sequelae and Financial Compensation in Litigants. Results From the PariS-TBI Study – Frontiers in Neurology.
- Negative impact of litigation procedures on patient outcomes four years after severe traumatic brain injury: results from the PariS-traumatic brain injury study – Disability and Rehabilitation.
- Severe Brain Injury, Disability, and the Law: Achieving Justice for a Marginalized Population – Florida State University Law Review.
- Ethical Implications of Representing Traumatic Brain Injury Clients in the Personal Injury Litigation Process – Mid-Atlantic Journal on Law & Public Policy.
- The Glasgow Coma Scale: A disconnect between medical documentation and traumatic brain injury litigation in the United States – Medico-Legal Journal.
Legal resources:
- Chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), Mayo Clinic.
- NRS 41A.011; Nevada Jury Instructions 10.05; BAJI 14.13. See also Helena Van Deynse et al, The incremental cost of traumatic brain injury during the first year after a road traffic accident, Brain Injury (July 12, 2019). See also Jeep Corp. v. Murray (1985) 101 Nev. 640, 708 P.2d 297.
- NRS 41A.035. See also Staccato v. Valley Hosp. (2007) 123 Nev. 526.
- Tam v. Eighth Judicial District Court, (2015) 358 P.3d 234. AB 404 (2023). In 2023, the pain and suffering damages cap in Nevada medical malpractice cases was $350,000.
- NRS 42.005 (1).
- NRS 42.005 (2)(a).
- NRS 42.005 (2)(d).
- NRS 42.010.