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🦴 Chicago Spinal Cord Injury Lawyer
Paralysis & SCI Attorney

A spinal cord injury redefines life — paralysis, lifetime medical care, attendant care, home modifications, and lost earning capacity. Schwaner Injury Law represents Illinois SCI victims with complete and incomplete injuries, paraplegia from thoracic and lumbar damage, and quadriplegia/tetraplegia from cervical (C1–C7) injuries. We build the life-care plan, retain the right experts, and fight for every dollar your future requires.

By David J. Schwaner, J.D. · Loyola University Chicago School of Law · Illinois Bar 2005
Reviewed and updated by David J. Schwaner, J.D. — 2026-05-06 Illinois Personal Injury Attorney · 20+ Years Experience
Immediate Steps

What to Do After a Spinal Cord Injury

  • Do not move the injured person — wait for EMS to stabilize the spine
  • Get to a Level I trauma center — Northwestern, Stroger, Loyola, UIC
  • Document the level of injury (e.g., C5, T6, L1) on every medical record
  • Begin acute rehabilitation early — RIC/Shirley Ryan AbilityLab is the gold standard
  • Preserve the scene, vehicles, and equipment that caused the injury
  • Do not give recorded statements to any insurance company
  • Contact a Chicago spinal cord injury attorney immediately — evidence disappears fast
Common Causes

Common Causes of SCI Cases

  • Motor vehicle crashes — the leading cause of spinal cord injury in the U.S.
  • Falls from height — construction sites, ladders, scaffolding, stairs
  • Acts of violence — gunshot wounds, stabbings, assaults
  • Sports injuries — diving into shallow water, football, gymnastics
  • Surgical errors — anesthesia mishaps, retained instruments, spinal surgery negligence
  • Construction accidents — falls, struck-by-object, crushing injuries
  • Defective products — vehicle defects, helmet failures, machinery
Settlement Ranges

Compensation in Illinois Spinal Cord Injury Cases

SCI verdicts and settlements are among the largest in personal injury law because of lifetime attendant care needs (~$200K/year for high quadriplegia). Typical Illinois ranges:

  • Incomplete SCI: $1,000,000 – $5,000,000 — partial preservation of motor or sensory function below the injury level
  • Complete Paraplegia: $5,000,000 – $10,000,000+ — full lower-body paralysis, partial attendant care, lost earning capacity
  • High Quadriplegia (C1–C4): $10,000,000 – $20,000,000+ — ventilator dependence, 24/7 attendant care (~$200K/year), full lifetime medical costs
  • Lifetime medical care — surgeries, medications, equipment replacement, pressure-sore prevention
  • Wheelchair-accessible home and vehicle modifications — typically $150K+ upfront
  • Lost earning capacity, vocational rehabilitation, and future earnings differential
  • Pain and suffering, disability, disfigurement, loss of normal life — uncapped in Illinois

Get Your Free Spinal Cord Injury Case Review

Schwaner Injury Law offers free, confidential consultations 24/7. No fee unless we win. Tell us what happened and we'll tell you if you have a case — no obligation.

Call (312) 635-4000 📋 Send Us Your Case

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Our Process

How We Handle Spinal Cord Injury Cases

From acute hospitalization through trial — here's exactly how David Schwaner builds 7- and 8-figure SCI cases in Cook County.

1

Free Hospital-Side Consultation

For catastrophic SCI cases, David comes to you — at the hospital or rehab facility. We start protecting your case while you focus on stabilization.

2

Evidence Preservation

We send preservation letters within 24 hours, secure vehicles, equipment, surveillance video, employer records, and accident-scene evidence before they disappear.

3

Life-Care Plan & Economist

A certified life-care planner (CLCP) builds a lifetime care projection — attendant care, equipment, surgeries, modifications. A forensic economist present-values the entire plan.

4

Settlement or Trial

SCI cases routinely produce 7- and 8-figure verdicts when fully prepared. If insurers refuse fair settlement, David takes the case to a Cook County jury.

5

Lifetime Recovery Funded

You receive your settlement or verdict — often structured to fund lifetime care needs. Our fee comes only from your recovery. No fee unless we win.

Know Your Rights

Illinois Law & Your Spinal Cord Injury Rights

SCI litigation in Illinois turns on lifetime damages models, expert testimony, and evidentiary rules unique to catastrophic injury cases.

Illinois SCI Law: Statutes, Damages & Evidence

  • ⚖️Statute of Limitations: 2 years from date of injury (735 ILCS 5/13-202). Tolled for minors until age 18.
  • ⚖️Medical Malpractice SCI: 2-year discovery + 4-year statute of repose (735 ILCS 5/13-212).
  • ⚖️Life-Care Plans: Illinois courts admit CLCP-prepared life-care plans as the standard for projecting lifetime medical and attendant care costs.
  • ⚖️Lifetime Medical & Attendant Care: Recoverable in full — high quadriplegia attendant care alone runs ~$200,000 per year for life.
  • ⚖️Home & Vehicle Modifications: Wheelchair-accessible housing, ramps, lifts, modified vans — all recoverable as economic damages.
  • ⚖️Lost Earning Capacity: Vocational rehabilitation expert plus forensic economist project the lifetime earnings differential.
  • ⚖️No Damages Cap: Illinois has no statutory cap on pain and suffering or non-economic damages (Lebron v. Gottlieb, 2010).
  • ⚖️Workers' Comp + Third-Party: SCI victims hurt at work can pursue both Illinois workers' comp and third-party liability cases (with carrier lien rules).
Why Choose Us

Why Chicago SCI Victims Choose Schwaner Injury Law

$30M+ Recovered

David Schwaner has recovered over $30 million for catastrophically injured Chicagoans, including paralysis cases.

20+ Years Experience

Two decades litigating catastrophic injury and paralysis cases in Cook County. We know the experts, the medicine, and the courts.

SCI Expert Network

We work with top life-care planners, physiatrists, vocational rehab experts, and economists to fully document lifetime damages.

Zero Fees Unless We Win

No upfront costs. We advance every expense — life-care planners, depositions, expert fees — and only get paid when you do.

More Questions Answered

Spinal Cord Injury Questions — Answered by David Schwaner

Illinois-specific answers to the questions SCI victims and families ask most. If your question isn't here, call (312) 635-4000 — David answers personally.

What is the difference between paraplegia and quadriplegia?

Paraplegia is paralysis of the lower body caused by spinal cord damage in the thoracic, lumbar, or sacral regions (T1 and below). Quadriplegia (also called tetraplegia) is paralysis of all four limbs caused by spinal cord damage in the cervical region (C1–C7). The higher the cervical injury, the more severe the impairment — a C1–C4 injury typically requires ventilator support, while a C5–C7 injury preserves more arm function.

What is the lifetime cost of a spinal cord injury?

According to the National Spinal Cord Injury Statistical Center, the lifetime cost of a spinal cord injury sustained at age 25 ranges from approximately $1.6 million for incomplete motor function loss to over $5.4 million for high tetraplegia (C1–C4). Annual attendant care alone for a high quadriplegic commonly exceeds $200,000 per year. Lifetime cost projections must include medical care, attendant care, durable medical equipment (specialty wheelchairs every 5 years), home modifications, vehicle modifications, and lost earnings — all of which must be present-valued by a forensic economist.

Will I need a life-care planner for my SCI case?

Yes — a life-care planner is essential in any moderate or severe spinal cord injury case. The life-care planner is a certified rehabilitation specialist (often a nurse with CLCP credentials) who works with your treating physicians to project every future medical need across your lifetime: surgeries, medications, durable medical equipment, attendant care hours, home and vehicle modifications, and skin-care/pressure-sore prevention. The plan is then present-valued by an economist. Without a life-care plan, defendants will lowball your damages.

What does C5 quadriplegia mean?

A C5 spinal cord injury means the damage is at the fifth cervical vertebra. People with C5 quadriplegia typically retain shoulder and biceps function (allowing the arms to bend at the elbow), but lose wrist, hand, and lower-body function. They can usually feed themselves with adaptive equipment, may drive a modified vehicle, but require attendant care for transfers, bathing, and dressing. Each cervical level (C1, C2, C3, C4, C5, C6, C7) preserves slightly more function than the level above it — which is why precise injury level documentation is critical to your damages model.

What is the statute of limitations for spinal cord injury in Illinois?

Illinois has a 2-year statute of limitations for personal injury claims under 735 ILCS 5/13-202, including spinal cord injuries. The clock starts on the date of injury. For minors, the statute is tolled until age 18 (then runs 2 years). Medical malpractice SCI claims are subject to the 4-year statute of repose under 735 ILCS 5/13-212. Workers' compensation claims have separate timing rules under the Illinois Workers' Compensation Act. Because SCI cases are evidence-intensive, you should not wait — call (312) 635-4000 immediately.

What damages can I recover for paralysis in Illinois?

Illinois SCI victims can recover: past and future medical expenses (acute care, rehabilitation, surgery, specialty equipment), attendant and nursing care (often the largest single damages category), lost wages and lost earning capacity, vocational rehabilitation, home and vehicle modifications, pain and suffering, loss of normal life, disability and disfigurement, and loss of consortium for spouses. Illinois has no cap on non-economic damages (Lebron v. Gottlieb, 2010), so SCI verdicts and settlements regularly reach 7- and 8-figure numbers.

Can I file a workers' comp claim and a third-party SCI lawsuit at the same time?

Often, yes. If you suffered a spinal cord injury at work — especially in construction or trucking — Illinois workers' compensation pays your medical bills and a portion of lost wages regardless of fault, but typically prohibits suing your employer. However, you can usually sue any third party who caused or contributed to the injury (a subcontractor, equipment manufacturer, property owner, or another driver). The third-party case captures full pain and suffering damages and lost earning capacity that workers' comp does not pay. The carrier has a lien against the third-party recovery, but the net result is dramatically larger.

How much does a spinal cord injury lawyer cost? Do you work on contingency?

Schwaner Injury Law handles all spinal cord injury cases on a contingency fee basis — no upfront fees, no cost unless we win. We advance every litigation expense, including life-care planners, vocational economists, treating physician fees, and deposition costs. Our fee is taken only as a percentage of the recovery. The initial consultation is always free and confidential. Call (312) 635-4000 to speak directly with David Schwaner.

🦴 Serving Chicagoland

Chicago Spinal Cord Injury Attorney — Serving All of Chicagoland

Schwaner Injury Law handles spinal cord injury and paralysis cases throughout the Chicago metropolitan area including Chicago, Evanston, Oak Park, Skokie, Berwyn, Cicero, Logan Square, Pilsen, Hyde Park, Lincoln Park, Wicker Park, Bucktown, Rogers Park, Lakeview, Wrigleyville, Naperville, Aurora, Schaumburg, and throughout Cook, DuPage, Lake, Kane, and Will counties. Wherever you suffered a spinal cord injury in northeastern Illinois, David Schwaner can help. Call (312) 635-4000 for a free consultation. Available 24/7, no fee unless we win.

David J. Schwaner, J.D. — Chicago personal injury attorney

About the Author — David J. Schwaner, J.D.

David J. Schwaner is a Chicago personal injury and catastrophic injury attorney with more than 20 years of trial experience and over $30 million recovered for injured Illinoisans. After graduating from Loyola University Chicago School of Law and being admitted to the Illinois bar in 2005, David built a practice focused on spinal cord injuries, brain injuries, medical malpractice, and other catastrophic cases. He has a 98% case recovery rate, represents clients in English and Spanish, and works directly with each client from intake through trial.

JD · Loyola Chicago Law IL Bar 2005 ISBA Member ITLA Member Super Lawyers Rated Avvo Top Attorney English · Español