In and around Clay, many injuries happen during routine commuting and local errands—driving in traffic, loading/unloading, walking between parking areas, or moving through parking lots and sidewalks that can get slick with rain and humidity.
Insurers frequently try to narrow the story by claiming the fracture was:
- unrelated to the incident
- “pre-existing”
- caused by something else after the accident
That’s why the timeline matters. A strong Clay fracture case typically connects:
- what happened at the scene
- when symptoms began or worsened
- when imaging and orthopedic evaluation occurred
- how treatment progressed
Even a short gap between the incident and diagnosis can become a dispute point. We help you organize the facts so the medical record and the incident story match clearly.


