Paralysis injuries often involve emergency treatment, specialized imaging, and months of follow-up care. In Michigan, delays can matter because key evidence is time-sensitive—surveillance footage gets overwritten, witnesses move on, vehicle/scene details change, and medical records become harder to reconstruct.
Southfield’s mix of roadways, commuting traffic, and active neighborhoods means serious injuries can happen in many ways, including:
- High-impact collisions along major corridors during rush hours
- Pedestrian or crosswalk incidents near commercial areas
- Construction-adjacent hazards and lane closures that increase crash risk
- Workplace injuries for people commuting to industrial and office settings
When paralysis is involved, the goal is to build a case that matches the severity of the injury—not just the first hospital visit.


