In a smaller community like Yuma, it’s common for injuries to involve multiple providers—an initial ER visit, follow-up surgeries, rehabilitation, and sometimes prosthetics services that are coordinated over time. That creates a practical problem for injury claims: the timeline must be consistent across medical records, incident reports, and any statements given to insurance.
After an amputation injury, what you do in the first days can affect what later evidence supports. That means:
- Getting the right records (not just the discharge summary)
- Preserving incident details while they’re still available
- Avoiding statements that can be misunderstood
- Building a damages picture that reflects long-term prosthetic and mobility needs


