In a local injury claim, the gap is usually not the diagnosis—it’s the proof. After a spinal cord injury, your settlement value often depends on:
- how quickly neurological symptoms were documented after the incident
- what imaging and exams show (and how consistently they’re connected to the event)
- how your functional limitations affect daily life in real terms (mobility, self-care, caregiving needs)
- whether future medical care is supported by clinicians—not just assumed
AI tools may produce a number or range, but without the evidentiary record, it’s more like a weather forecast than a map. In West Haven, that distinction matters because insurers frequently dispute severity, timeline, and responsibility, especially when there are delays between the crash and definitive findings.


