In Blue Island, catastrophic injuries commonly occur in high-stress, fast-moving situations—commuting crashes, intersections with heavy traffic, and sudden pedestrian encounters. When a person becomes paralyzed, the timeline matters: what happened in the first hours after the accident, what was documented in the ER, and how quickly records were requested and preserved.
Insurers typically begin investigating early. They may argue that the injury was pre-existing, unrelated, or the result of an intervening event. In paralysis cases, those defenses can be especially persuasive without a well-organized record connecting:
- the incident sequence,
- the emergency diagnosis,
- the imaging and neurologic findings,
- and the course of treatment.
The difference between a weak and a strong claim is often documentation—organized by a team that knows what to look for.


