In many catastrophic limb cases, the initial event is only part of the story. For example, Springfield-area incidents may involve:
- Industrial and construction work where crush injuries, caught-in-between incidents, or equipment hazards can escalate quickly.
- Motor vehicle collisions on major routes where trauma can lead to complications requiring emergency intervention.
- Pedestrian and cyclist impacts—including downtown and near busy corridors—where severe tissue damage may develop after the initial trauma.
Legally, the key is that insurers may try to minimize what happened by focusing only on the “moment” of injury. But in real life, amputations often follow a chain: the event, emergency care, surgical decisions, complications, and ultimately the need for limb loss.


