Many tools generate a “range” based on inputs like injury severity, age, and care needs. That can feel helpful, especially when you’re trying to understand what compensation might look like.
But in practice, spinal injury value depends heavily on the details that a generic model can’t truly see—such as:
- Your documented neurological level and whether the injury is complete or incomplete
- Functional findings (transfers, ambulation, balance, fine motor tasks)
- Complications that can arise in the months after injury (skin breakdown risk, respiratory issues, bowel/bladder complications)
- Whether your medical team can support a clear prognosis and future care plan
In Cedar City, that evidence matters even more because insurance adjusters often compare your case to prior settlements they’ve handled across Utah jurisdictions. If your records don’t clearly support causation and future needs, the insurer’s “AI-like” assumptions can undervalue your claim.


