Matthews sits near major regional routes and growing suburban corridors, which means catastrophic injuries can happen in fast-moving, high-traffic settings—like:
- Rear-end collisions and lane-change crashes during rush hour
- Motorcycle and bicycle impacts where drivers may dispute fault
- Slip-and-fall incidents on uneven pavement, poorly lit walkways, or during seasonal weather
- Workplace accidents tied to logistics, construction, and industrial maintenance
In these cases, insurers often focus on immediate liability issues and may argue that the paralysis was caused by something unrelated—or that the injury wasn’t as severe as described. A paralysis claim requires more than sympathy; it needs an evidence strategy that ties the incident to the medical findings.


