After a catastrophic limb injury, insurance carriers often move quickly—requesting recorded statements, pushing paperwork, and offering settlements that focus on “what’s known today,” not what you’ll need next year (or five years from now).
In Burleson, those pressure points can be amplified by the way injuries happen:
- Commuter and vehicle collisions that involve delayed recognition of vascular or nerve damage.
- Construction and industrial workforce injuries where safety procedures, training, and equipment maintenance may be disputed.
- Premises and retail incidents where lighting, maintenance, and warning practices are reviewed after the fact.
A strong claim connects the incident to the medical pathway that led to amputation—and it documents the costs beyond the initial emergency.


