A Louisiana spinal cord injury lawyer represents victims who suffer paralysis, chronic pain, or permanent disability from accidents caused by negligence. Smiley Injury Law pursues maximum compensation for catastrophic spinal injuries from slip-and-fall accidents, car crashes, workplace incidents, and medical malpractice throughout Louisiana, including lifetime care costs.
Spinal cord injuries are among the most devastating injuries a person can suffer. According to the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, approximately 17,000 new spinal cord injuries occur in the United States each year, often resulting in permanent paralysis, loss of sensation, and life-altering complications requiring decades of specialized care.
At Smiley Injury Law, our catastrophic injury attorneys understand that spinal cord injury cases require comprehensive legal strategies accounting for lifetime medical needs, lost earning capacity, home modifications, assistive technology, and the profound impact on victims and their families. We fight aggressively against negligent property owners, reckless drivers, and other responsible parties throughout New Orleans, Baton Rouge, Shreveport, Lafayette, and communities statewide.
The spinal cord serves as the body’s central communication pathway, transmitting signals between the brain and the rest of the body. When trauma damages the spinal cord, it disrupts these signals, potentially causing paralysis, loss of sensation, and impaired organ function below the injury site.
Complete spinal cord injuries result in total loss of motor function and sensation below the injury level. The spinal cord is fully severed or damaged to the point where no signals pass through. Complete injuries typically cause permanent paralysis with no possibility of recovery below the injury site.
Incomplete spinal cord injuries preserve some motor function or sensation below the injury. The degree of impairment varies significantly—some victims retain substantial movement while others experience severe limitations. Incomplete injuries sometimes improve with aggressive rehabilitation, though many cause permanent disability.
Spinal cord injuries cause different paralysis patterns depending on the injury location:
Falls are the leading cause of spinal cord injuries for individuals over 65 and a significant cause across all age groups. Slip-and-fall accidents on wet floors, broken stairs, uneven surfaces, and inadequate lighting cause devastating spinal trauma when victims strike their backs or land awkwardly. Under Louisiana Civil Code Article 2317.1, property owners who fail to maintain safe premises bear responsibility for resulting injuries.
Vehicle collisions generate tremendous force that can fracture vertebrae, herniate discs, and damage spinal cord tissue. Car accidents, truck crashes, and motorcycle collisions account for approximately 38% of all spinal cord injuries nationwide. Even with modern vehicle safety features, occupants remain vulnerable to spinal trauma in high-speed impacts, rollovers, and T-bone collisions.
Louisiana’s industrial economy creates environments where spinal cord injuries occur with tragic frequency. Construction accidents involving falls from scaffolding, ladders, and roofs cause severe spinal trauma. Offshore oil platform incidents, manufacturing equipment malfunctions, and falling objects also result in catastrophic spinal injuries. Workers may have claims beyond workers’ compensation when third-party negligence contributes to their injuries.
Surgical errors during spinal procedures, failure to properly immobilize trauma patients, delayed diagnosis of spinal injuries, and anesthesia complications can cause or worsen spinal cord damage. Medical malpractice claims involving spinal cord injuries require expert testimony establishing how healthcare providers deviated from accepted standards of care.
Spinal cord injuries impose staggering financial burdens that extend across victims’ lifetimes. According to the National Spinal Cord Injury Statistical Center, lifetime costs for spinal cord injury patients can exceed several million dollars depending on injury severity and the victim’s age at injury.
Average first-year expenses following spinal cord injury vary significantly by severity:
Beyond first-year costs, spinal cord injury victims face substantial ongoing expenses including home healthcare and personal care assistance, physical and occupational therapy, medical equipment replacement and maintenance, prescription medications for pain, spasticity, and complications, wheelchair and mobility device upgrades, home and vehicle modifications, and treatment for secondary conditions like pressure sores, urinary tract infections, and respiratory complications.
Louisiana spinal cord injury victims can recover compensation for all economic losses including:
Louisiana allows full recovery for non-economic losses including physical pain and suffering during treatment and ongoing discomfort, emotional distress and mental anguish from permanent disability, loss of enjoyment of life when paralysis prevents activities victims previously enjoyed, loss of consortium for spouses affected by the injury, and disfigurement or scarring from surgical procedures. Louisiana does not cap pain and suffering damages in personal injury cases, allowing juries to award compensation reflecting the profound impact of catastrophic spinal injuries.
Catastrophic spinal cord injury cases require comprehensive life care plans documenting all future medical, rehabilitation, and personal care needs. Life care planners work with medical specialists to project costs for wheelchairs, hospital beds, medications, therapy, home modifications, and attendant care over the victim’s expected lifespan. Economists then calculate the present value of these future expenses to ensure compensation covers lifetime needs.
Recovering compensation for spinal cord injuries requires establishing that another party’s negligence caused your accident. Louisiana law requires proving the defendant owed you a duty of care, breached that duty through negligent conduct, and directly caused your spinal injury and resulting damages.
For slip-and-fall spinal injury cases, Louisiana Revised Statutes 9:2800.6 requires proving the dangerous condition presented an unreasonable risk, the property owner had actual or constructive notice before your fall, and the owner failed to exercise reasonable care. Surveillance footage, maintenance records, prior incident reports, and employee testimony help establish these elements in catastrophic injury cases.
Spinal cord injury cases require extensive medical expert testimony. Neurosurgeons, neurologists, physiatrists, and rehabilitation specialists explain how the accident caused your spinal injury, the permanence of your condition, your future medical needs, and your prognosis. Accident reconstruction experts may demonstrate how the incident occurred and why the defendant bears responsibility.
Louisiana’s prescription period for personal injury claims is two years from the accident date for injuries occurring on or after July 1, 2024. For injuries before that date, the deadline is only one year under Louisiana Civil Code Article 3492. Given the complexity of spinal cord injury cases and the need for extensive medical documentation, contacting an attorney promptly is essential to preserve evidence and meet filing deadlines.
Louisiana follows pure comparative fault under Civil Code Article 2323, allowing spinal cord injury victims to recover compensation even if partially responsible for their accident. Your recovery is reduced by your percentage of fault. Given the catastrophic nature of spinal cord injuries, even substantial fault reductions leave significant compensation available. If you’re found 40% responsible and damages total $5 million, you would still recover $3 million.
RECENTLY ASKED TOPICS
Life care planners work with medical specialists to project all future care needs including equipment, therapy, medications, attendant care, and medical appointments over the victim’s expected lifespan.
Economists then calculate present value using discount rates and inflation factors, ensuring compensation covers actual lifetime needs.
When at-fault parties lack sufficient insurance to cover spinal cord injury damages, victims may pursue multiple sources including underinsured motorist coverage, umbrella policies, commercial insurance, and personal assets.
Experienced attorneys identify all available coverage and responsible parties to maximize recovery for catastrophic injuries.
Yes, Louisiana law allows spouses to recover loss of consortium damages when their partner suffers a spinal cord injury.
This compensates for lost companionship, affection, intimacy, and household services. If the victim dies from complications, family members may pursue wrongful death claims for their own losses.
Yes, experienced legal representation is essential for Louisiana spinal cord injury cases.
These claims involve millions of dollars, complex medical evidence, life care planning, and sophisticated insurance company tactics. Without proper representation, victims risk settlements that fail to cover lifetime care needs, leaving them financially devastated years later.
Spinal cord injury victims face numerous secondary complications including chronic pain, pressure sores, urinary tract infections, respiratory problems, blood clots, autonomic dysreflexia, depression, and muscle spasticity.
These complications require ongoing medical management and significantly increase lifetime care costs and compensation value.
Louisiana spinal cord injury lawsuits typically take 2-4 years to resolve due to their complexity and high value.
Cases require extensive medical documentation, life care planning, economic analysis, and often multiple expert witnesses. Many cases settle after discovery reveals evidence strength, though some proceed to trial.
Paraplegia affects the lower body (legs and possibly lower torso) from thoracic, lumbar, or sacral spinal injuries, while quadriplegia (tetraplegia) affects all four limbs and torso from cervical (neck) spinal injuries.
Quadriplegia typically involves more severe disability, higher care needs, and greater compensation value.
Yes, you can sue property owners for spinal cord injuries from slip-and-fall accidents in Louisiana when negligence caused your fall.
Property owners must maintain reasonably safe conditions and address known hazards. Falls on wet floors, broken stairs, or uneven surfaces that cause spinal trauma create valid premises liability claims.
Louisiana spinal cord injury case values range from hundreds of thousands to tens of millions of dollars depending on injury severity, victim’s age, and lifetime care needs.
Paraplegia cases typically settle for $1-5 million, while tetraplegia cases involving permanent ventilator dependence can exceed $10-20 million or more.
Don’t allow a spinal cord injury accident to completely derail your life while property owners and their insurance companies try to avoid responsibility.
We offer free consultations to individuals who have suffered spinal cord injuries. These consultations allow you to discuss your case with an experienced attorney who can evaluate your claim and explain your legal options without any financial obligation.
Time is critical in spinal cord injury cases because evidence can disappear, witnesses may forget important details, and Louisiana’s statute of limitations sets strict deadlines for filing claims. Don’t wait to speak to a qualified legal professional.
Call (504) 385-0246 for a free consultation with an experienced Louisiana spinal cord injury lawyer at Smiley Injury Law. We’re ready to fight for your rights and help you obtain the compensation that represents the full value of your claim.
Contact us today for a free consultation and let us advocate for your rights.
201 St Charles Ave Ste 2500
New Orleans LA, 70170
Phone: (504) 788-1319
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