Online tools typically rely on broad inputs—age, injury category, hospitalization length, and a few assumed future needs. But spinal cord injuries don’t follow a one-size-fits-all pattern, and Wayne claimants often face additional realities that generic tools don’t model well:
- Care doesn’t stop after the hospital. Rehabilitation, follow-up imaging, equipment, home modifications, and medication changes can continue for years.
- Complications can shift the course. Infections, additional procedures, or evolving neurological symptoms can increase both medical cost and disability impact.
- Commuting and work routines drive measurable losses. Missed work schedules, reduced ability to perform job duties, and transportation barriers can be tied directly to the injury.
- Michigan claim timing affects what you can prove. Delays in treatment documentation, inconsistent symptom reporting, or missed follow-ups can become issues during valuation.
A calculator may tell you what a “typical” case might look like. Your settlement value depends on what your records show—and how well your case is organized.


