In Tennessee, injury cases generally depend on proving (1) responsibility and (2) losses supported by documentation. In amputation cases, the “responsibility” question often turns on what went wrong before the injury became catastrophic—such as:
- Worksite safety failures (equipment guarding, lockout/tagout, training gaps, improper maintenance)
- Traffic and commuting collisions (failure to yield, speeding, distracted driving, inadequate traffic control)
- Unsafe premises conditions (hazards on walkways, poor lighting, failure to correct known risks)
- Defective products or devices (manufacturing/design issues, missing warnings, foreseeable misuse)
- Medical complications (delayed treatment, infection management issues, failure to respond to vascular/nerve complications)
Because amputation can be the final stage of a longer medical deterioration, insurers may try to limit responsibility by focusing on the “medical outcome” rather than the cause. Your lawyer’s job is to connect the incident, the medical timeline, and the losses—cleanly and convincingly.


