In Lexington, injuries can happen in environments that move fast and generate lots of paperwork: busy job sites, high-traffic corridors with distracted driving, residential construction and property maintenance, and emergency-room transfers that occur quickly.
After an amputation, the medical record becomes your foundation. The details—when tissue damage worsened, how quickly complications were addressed, what imaging showed, and what specialists recommended—can determine whether a claim is treated as preventable or unavoidable.
That’s why acting early matters:
- Get your records while they’re easiest to obtain (ER notes, operative reports, discharge paperwork).
- Preserve incident information (worksite logs, scene photos, vehicle documentation, witness contact info).
- Be cautious with statements to insurance—what feels like “just explaining” can later be used to minimize causation.


