(3) Your Health Insurance Provider - You may have private health insurance or belong to an HMO (Health Maintenance Organization). In the event of a personal injury from a car accident, you can ask your health insurer to pay for medical treatment. Sometimes, private health insurance plans or HMOs require you to seek recovery from your auto insurance company before the health organization will pay or provide medical treatment. (4) Other People Involved In the Accident - In addition to the three sources above, you may be able to seek recovery from other people who were involved in the accident. Your ability to recover money from another driver may be limited by the laws of the state in which the accident occurred (not necessarily the same state where you live). The state where the accident occurred may have a `no-fault` law where each person involved in an accident pays for their injuries through their own insurance, or a `fault` law, where the party `at fault` or who caused the accident pays for damages. If you are `at-fault` for an accident that occurred in a `fault` state, contact your insurance company. It is the company`s job to defend you in court or to negotiate a settlement. When the other party is at fault in a `fault` state, you would seek compensation from their insurer in that case, or your insurer would seek compensation from their insurer.
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