Spinal cord injuries are frequently treated as “catastrophic,” but the legal evaluation depends on what the record shows about neurological damage and future impact. In Burlingame, that proof often comes from details tied to the way people move around town:
- Commuter traffic and multi-vehicle collisions on busy corridors
- Pedestrian and crosswalk incidents near retail and neighborhood activity areas
- Rear-end impacts where symptoms may appear immediately—or worsen after the initial shock
- Construction and resurfacing zones that can complicate fault and visibility
An AI calculator may ask for injury severity and basic facts. The real work is documenting the chain from the event to the spinal cord damage and then translating that into costs and losses supported by California evidence rules.


