A Lifetime Injury Demands a Lifetime Plan
A spinal cord injury — whether resulting in paraplegia, tetraplegia (quadriplegia), or incomplete injury — is one of the most serious injuries a person can sustain. It can bring permanent paralysis, loss of bladder and bowel function, chronic pain, pressure sores, respiratory complications, and a lifetime of medical and personal-care needs. The compensation must reflect not just today's losses but a lifetime of them.
Catastrophic Impairment and Maximum Benefits
Traumatic paraplegia and tetraplegia generally meet the SABS definition of catastrophic impairment. That designation is critical: it raises the combined medical/rehabilitation limit and the attendant-care limit to up to $1 million each — far above the non-catastrophic limits — funding the treatment, equipment, and care a spinal-cord-injured person actually needs. We pursue the catastrophic designation from the outset with the necessary specialist evidence.
Securing the catastrophic designation can be the single most important step in a spinal cord injury case. The difference between the non-catastrophic and catastrophic limits can amount to hundreds of thousands of dollars in available benefits.
Quantifying a Lifetime of Need
Beyond accident benefits, the tort claim must capture the full lifetime cost of the injury. We retain life-care planners, physiatrists, occupational therapists, and economists to build a detailed, defensible projection of future needs, including:
- Attendant and personal care, often 24 hours a day.
- Power wheelchairs, assistive technology, and ongoing equipment replacement.
- Home modifications or accessible housing, and an accessible vehicle.
- Ongoing medical care, medications, and management of secondary complications.
- Lost income and lost earning capacity over the person's working life.
The Tort Claim and the Family
The tort claim against the at-fault party pursues pain and suffering, the full future-care cost, and income loss. Family members who provide care or suffer the loss of their loved one's companionship may bring derivative claims under the Family Law Act.
Why Experienced Counsel Matters
Insurers know how much these claims are worth and resist them accordingly. Proper valuation requires the right experts, meticulous documentation, and a willingness to take the case to trial if a fair settlement is not offered. We prepare every spinal-cord case to that standard.