Yeadon’s mix of road commuting and closely spaced neighborhoods creates a familiar pattern: serious crashes and slip/trip incidents can happen quickly, but the evidence needed to prove how the injury occurred—and what it will cost long-term—often has to be assembled over time.
That matters because spinal cord injuries are evaluated around functional impact and future care, not just the diagnosis label. An AI estimate may treat two people with similar wording on a medical chart as if they have the same prognosis. In practice, the details that change valuation—neurological severity, complications, and the need for ongoing assistance—come from the medical record and follow-up testing.
So, rather than asking “What’s my settlement value?” the better question is: What evidence do we need to make the value you deserve defensible?


