After a catastrophic injury, families usually face a flood of paperwork: ER discharge forms, imaging results, therapy schedules, bills, insurance letters, and workplace documentation. The problem is that paralysis cases depend on timing and consistency—what was recorded right after the incident is often what insurers and defense teams scrutinize most.
In Concord, common scenarios include:
- Rear-end and multi-vehicle crashes on high-traffic routes where braking distance and lane changes become disputed facts.
- Parking lot incidents near retail centers where lighting, signage, and maintenance logs may be contested.
- Worksite injuries tied to industrial schedules—where supervisors, safety documentation, and incident reporting determine what’s provable.
A paralysis claim isn’t just about what happened; it’s about proving the connection between the incident and the neurological damage—using records that can be verified.


