In Ferndale, serious injuries frequently involve fast-moving circumstances—road impacts, active construction areas, deliveries, shop-floor hazards, and complex medical transfers. That matters because insurers and defense teams in Michigan often try to narrow the story quickly:
- They may argue the injury was “inevitable” or caused by pre-existing conditions.
- They may challenge causation (for example, whether delayed care, infection, or complications were avoidable).
- They may focus on what happened last, not what set the chain in motion.
For a limb-loss case, that’s a major problem. Amputation is often the end result of an earlier event—crush trauma, loss of blood flow, burns, infection progression, or device-related failure—plus medical decisions along the way.


