Paralysis isn’t just “a bad injury.” It can change mobility, bladder/bowel function, sleep, independence, employment ability, and family responsibilities. In many Schaumburg-area claims, the underlying event involves complex fault questions—such as:
- Commercial trucks and delivery traffic merging near major roads
- Intersection collisions where signals, lane changes, and visibility are disputed
- High-speed impacts on commuting routes and the role of braking/response time
- Secondary impacts (like falls during or after a crash)
Because insurers know paralysis often requires extensive future support, they may focus on gaps in documentation, argue pre-existing conditions, or dispute how the accident caused the neurological outcome.
A paralysis attorney helps you confront those issues early—before key evidence disappears.


