"Catastrophic injury" is the term used in personal injury practice to describe injuries so severe that they permanently alter the course of the victim's life. These cases require a different level of preparation and resources than ordinary injury cases — the medical issues are more complex, the lifetime damages are larger, the experts required are more specialized, and the insurance and asset investigation has to be more comprehensive. If you or a loved one has suffered a catastrophic injury anywhere in Miami-Dade, Broward, or Monroe County, you need a Florida personal injury lawyer with the experience and resources to handle the case properly.
Florida has a specific statutory definition of "catastrophic injury" in the workers' compensation context, codified at Florida Statute § 440.02(38). It includes spinal cord injury producing severe paralysis, amputation of an arm, hand, foot, or leg, severe brain or closed-head injury, second- or third-degree burns of 25% or more of the body, total or industrial blindness, or any other injury that would otherwise qualify for permanent total disability benefits. While this definition technically applies only in workers' comp cases, it tracks closely what most lawyers and insurance companies treat as "catastrophic" in any setting.
The economic damages in a catastrophic injury case can be enormous. A complete C4 spinal cord injury producing tetraplegia, for example, requires:
The total economic damages in a serious spinal cord case routinely exceed $10 million and in many cases $20 million. Documenting these damages requires a coordinated team of experts: a treating physiatrist, a life-care planner certified in catastrophic injury planning, a vocational rehabilitation expert, and a forensic economist who can reduce future damages to present value.
The available insurance and assets in a catastrophic case are often the binding constraint on actual recovery. We exhaustively investigate every possible source:
Florida applies modified comparative negligence with a 51% bar. If a jury assigns the catastrophically injured plaintiff more than 50% of the fault, recovery is barred entirely — making early investigation and liability development absolutely critical. There is no longer a hard cap on non-economic damages in most Florida personal injury cases (the medical-malpractice caps were struck down by the Florida Supreme Court). However, claims against government defendants are subject to the sovereign-immunity caps in § 768.28 ($200,000 per person / $300,000 per incident), with damages above the cap recoverable only by claims bill from the Florida Legislature.
For catastrophic injuries occurring on or after March 24, 2023, Florida's statute of limitations on most negligence claims is two years. Wrongful-death claims must be filed within two years of the date of death. Medical-malpractice cases follow the separate Chapter 766 deadlines.
If you or a loved one has suffered a catastrophic injury anywhere in South Florida, contact the Law Offices of Albert Goodwin. Call 786-522-1411 or email [email protected] for a free, confidential consultation.