The Shoulder
The Shoulder
55
swift-elk-979

Other driver ran a red light, wrecked my spine — what's a realistic settlement look like?

So I'm still kind of in shock that this is my life now. About four months ago a guy blew through a red light and T-boned me on my driver's side. Police report confirmed he got the ticket, his insurance already admitted liability pretty quickly, and they paid out for my car without much of a fight.

The medical side is where things get complicated. My MRI came back showing a herniated disc in my lower lumbar region with nerve involvement, plus some bulging at two levels in my cervical spine. I've been doing physical therapy twice a week, my primary care doctor has me on a nerve pain medication, and now my spine specialist is talking about epidural steroid injections as the next step. She also fitted me with a back support and told me to limit lifting to basically nothing.

I'm 34 years old and I work in logistics — being on my feet and moving stuff around is literally my job. I've already missed several weeks of work and I genuinely don't know when or if I'll be back to full capacity. The pain radiating down my left leg is relentless and some days I can barely get off the couch.

I know nobody can give me an exact number, and I'm not expecting that. I've talked to a PI attorney who took my case on contingency, but I'm just trying to wrap my head around what factors actually drive a settlement value in a situation like this. Is it mostly the medical bills? Future lost wages? The type of injury? How much does age factor in?

Anyone been through something similar with spinal injuries and injections involved? Would love to hear how the process went for you.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 6
    clever-swift-888

    I had a herniated disc from a rear-end collision a couple years ago and ended up needing two rounds of injections before I got any real relief. The settlement process took way longer than I expected — about 18 months from accident to check. My attorney kept telling me not to settle until we knew whether I'd need surgery, and that turned out to be really important advice. Don't let them rush you.

    • 13
      brave-marten-386

      Not legal advice, but generally speaking the factors that move the needle on spinal injury cases are: documented nerve involvement, recommended procedures (injections, possible surgery), your age and remaining work-life expectancy, and how clearly your lost wages and future earning capacity can be demonstrated. At 34 in a physical job, the lost earning capacity argument could be significant. Make sure your attorney is getting a life-care planner or vocational expert involved if the spine specialist thinks this is long-term. The fact that liability is already admitted is a real advantage — the fight will be about damages.

    • 6
      quiet-optimist372

      Really glad you posted an update — gives the rest of us some hope.

  • 10
    clever-vole-631

    Watch out — just because they paid the car damage fast and admitted liability doesn't mean they're going to be fair on the injury claim. That's actually a pretty common tactic. Get you comfortable, make you think they're on your side, then lowball the injury settlement and hope you take it before you fully understand how serious the injuries are. Do NOT accept anything until you've finished treatment or your doctors say you've reached maximum medical improvement.

  • 8
    curious-finch-727

    Worked in auto claims for years. When I see a file with multilevel spinal involvement and a specialist recommending interventional procedures, the internal reserve on that file goes up considerably. They're already anticipating this is a bigger case — they just won't tell you that. The adjuster assigned to you has a supervisor reviewing anything above a certain threshold, and trust me, your file has already been flagged. Having an attorney is smart. They'll negotiate differently with rep than they will with an unrepresented claimant, full stop.

    • 5
      careful-survivor339

      Really glad you posted an update — gives the rest of us some hope.

  • 18
    plain-dove-541

    Please don't skip the injections if your spine specialist is recommending them, even if you're nervous about it. I know people who put it off thinking they'd just push through, and the inflammation just kept causing more damage. Also — keep a pain journal starting today if you haven't. Date, pain level, what you couldn't do that day. It sounds tedious but it becomes really valuable documentation, especially for a physical job where your limitations have a direct dollar impact.

  • 5
    swift-marten-523

    Three things: don't settle early, don't post about this on any social media (yes, they check), and keep every single bill, receipt, and doctor's note in one folder. Your attorney needs that paper trail to build the damages picture. Everything else is noise right now.

  • 17
    bold-kestrel-346

    I'm so sorry you're going through this. The fact that you're dealing with constant leg pain AND the stress of not knowing if you can go back to your job — that's a lot. I hope you have people around you helping out. Don't forget that emotional and mental toll is real too, and worth mentioning to your doctors.

    • 9
      calm-commuter247

      Wish I had seen this a month ago — would have saved me a lot of stress.

  • 20
    warm-otter-967

    Quick question — when you say your spine specialist is 'talking about' injections, has she actually scheduled them or put it in writing in her treatment plan? There's a difference between a doctor casually mentioning it and formally recommending it as part of your documented care. Insurers will push back hard if the records are vague. Just want to make sure your attorney knows what's actually in the clinical notes versus what was said verbally.