Amputation injuries frequently don’t end at the moment of trauma. In the Perth Amboy area, common pathways to limb loss include:
- Construction and industrial incidents tied to shift work, tight timelines, and safety-critical tasks
- Commercial vehicle and commuter collisions where severe trauma may be followed by complications
- Pedestrian and crosswalk injuries in higher-activity corridors, where delayed evaluation can occur
- Household and neighborhood accidents (falls, power tool injuries, entrapment)
In many cases, the amputation becomes the end result of a sequence: the initial injury, emergency care, infection or circulation problems, and surgical decisions. The legal question becomes: who was responsible for the conditions that led to the outcome—and did anyone fail to meet safety or medical standards?


