When I receive the settlement will she be entitled to any of it?
You have an attorney.
It will be better for you to ask your attorney all questions, and seek clarification from your attorney of record.
He or she knows more about you and your business than a stranger could ever pretend to know.
There is much more to my situation that I'm unable to include here now.
I am unable to judge you, buddy.
Only you know what has been done to you.
If your health or life is being jeopardized (or neglected), I suggest you report it to your physician, your attorney, or the local police.
Why your physician?
Doctors today are asking patients about domestic violence and that is a very important channel that can get you help and keep your business confidential.
"Do you feel safe at home?"
It can feel like a strange question to be asked when you've come in because you're having chest pain, or because you've cut your finger.
But, doctors are supposed to ask – because this visit could be a brief window of opportunity to connect a victim to resources. Domestic violence has a major impact on people's health.
"There's heightened risk for everything from heart disease to asthma to mood disorders, and this is life-long prevalence for people who are victims," said Marcella Slick. She heads an initiative at Lutheran Settlement House in Philadelphia which places domestic violence counselors directly in hospitals.
A lot of doctors agree that this is a really important topic to bring up – but it can get pretty daunting.
"How do you do that in a timely fashion, and in a way that's sensitive, and doesn't seem like it's part of a script, how do you do it and have something to refer them to?" wondered Whitney Cabey, an emergency room physician. She's currently on a Robert Wood Johnson fellowship researching the role of social services in the ER setting.
Family physician Anita Ravi makes sure she explains that she is not singling a patient out. "I always say 'domestic violence is a common health issue that we can help people with, and connect them to resources, so I always ask all of my patients,'" she explained.
See the following link for the article that included the above information.
Doctors asking about domestic violence is important, but daunting - WHYY