In Northampton, catastrophic injuries can happen quickly—often on busy roadways, during rush-hour commuting, or in mixed-use areas where drivers and pedestrians share the same spaces. After a spinal cord injury, the details that matter most can disappear fast: surveillance footage may be overwritten, witnesses may become harder to locate, and vehicle or scene evidence may be removed.
That’s why the first priority is making sure the record is built correctly while medical care is underway. A strong paralysis claim usually depends on:
- The accident timeline (what happened, in what order)
- Medical proof of causation (how the incident relates to the neurological damage)
- Documentation of functional loss (what paralysis changed—mobility, bladder/bowel function, ability to work, and daily life)
If you’ve been asked to provide statements or recorded interviews, it’s especially important to have a plan first. Insurance teams may try to frame events in ways that reduce liability or limit damages.


