In Ashland, OH, catastrophic injuries commonly occur in everyday places: highway merges, local intersections, industrial or logistics work sites, and residential slip-and-fall environments. In moments like these, what matters most is how quickly key facts are captured—because paralysis cases rely on evidence that can fade or be disputed.
Even a short delay can complicate matters like:
- whether the scene was preserved or cleaned up,
- how soon imaging and specialist evaluation occurred,
- what witnesses remember before stories get reshaped by insurance conversations,
- whether the medical record clearly ties the incident to neurological outcomes.
That’s why many people ask about AI tools: not because AI replaces judgment, but because structured intake and evidence checklists can reduce the chance that something critical is lost.


