Heber residents see serious injuries from a mix of roadway scenarios—daytime traffic, weekend travel, and seasonal surges when the roads feel busier and conditions can change quickly. In these cases, paralysis claims usually turn on two things working together:
- What happened in the seconds before the injury (speed, lane position, braking, visibility, roadway conditions, vehicle defects)
- How the accident caused the neurological damage (imaging, emergency findings, surgical records, and follow-up exams)
Because paralysis injuries involve complex medical causation, a strong case isn’t built on one document or one opinion—it’s built by connecting the accident timeline to the medical timeline.


