OPINION
This аppeal arises from a jury’s award of damages in a personal injury suit. While appellant, Heather Hаrris, brings this appeal as to all three plaintiffs, she raises two points of error regarding the award of damages to Consuelo Balderas only. Appellant alleges that (1) the evidence is factually insufficient to support the jury’s award of damages to Consuelo Balderas and (2) the jury’s award of damages to Consuelo Balderas is excessive. We affirm the judgment of the trial court.
On or about August 6, 1994, appellant failed to comply with a stop sign at the intersection of Farm Road 2444 and Highway 286 in Brooks County. Appellant’s vehicle struck apрellees’ vehicle injuring Marta Balderas Ruiz, the driver, Octavio Balderas, passenger and Marta’s father, and Consuelo Balderas, passenger and Marta’s mother. Appellees sued appellant for injuries suffеred in the accident. Appellant admits fault and the only questions submitted to the jury concerned damages. Thе jury awarded Marta Balderas Ruiz the principal sum of one hundred fifty thousand dollars, Octavio Balderas the sum оf three hundred thousand dollars, *44 and Consuelo Balderas the sum of four million dollars.
Although appellant raises a separate point of error alleging that the evidence is factually insufficient to support the jury award of damages to Consuelo Balderas, appellant only argues in her brief that the damage award was excessive. Regardless of whether aрpellant intended to raise factual sufficiency as a separate point of error, our review of a damage award necessarily includes a factual sufficiency review. Therefore we addrеss both points of error together.
On appeal, we review points of error alleging excessive dаmages by applying a factual sufficiency analysis.
Rose v. Doctors Hosp.,
In assessing personal injury damages, we note that courts should use great restraint in overturning a jury verdict on sufficiency of the evidence.
Carr,
There is no сertain standard by which persona] injury damages can be measured, and each case must stand on its own facts and circumstances, and a comparison with other cases on amounts of verdicts are of little or no help.
Id. citing Caterpillar Tractor Co. v. Boyett,
In the present case, it is undisputed that Consuelo Balderas suffered serious injuries. A review of the еvidence illustrates that appellant, a registered nurse with experience in patients who suffer brain trаuma, testified that at the scene of the accident the emergency medical technician used bulb syringеs to suck the blood out of Consuelo’s nose and mouth. The technician had to strap Consuelo to a bаckboard because of violent seizures described by appellant as “not like any seizure I have sеen.” Appellant further testified to the amount of pain and suffering Consuelo Balderas must have felt at the sсene of the accident.
At the hospital, a neurosurgeon diagnosed Consuelo with a large blood clot in the frontal area of the brain. To remove the clot, the doctor removed a piecе of Consuelo’s skull because of a fear of infection. A hole between one and one and a half inches remains in Consuelo’s skull where the bone has not been replaced. After surgery, Consuelo remainеd in a coma for several weeks and remained hospitalized for approximately two months. Consuelo underwent extensive physical, speech, and occupational therapy.
A review of the record illustrates that the jury had direct evidence “of the nature, duration, or severity” of Consuelo Balderas’s anguish that creates a substantial disruption in her daily routine. Consuelo lost part of her memory because of severe brain damage *45 and does not remember significant life events from one moment to the next. Consuelo must use a walker or wheelchair. Consuelo must be reminded when to eat and when to stop eating. Tеstimony also illustrated that Consuelo needs assistance bathing, using the lavatory, and clothing herself. In general, Cоnsuelo can no longer cook, clean, or socialize with friends as she did prior to the accident. We find sufficient evidence of a substantial disruption in the plaintiffs daily routine to support the jury’s award of damages.
We overrule appellant’s points of error and affirm the judgment of the trial court as to all appellants.
