Moody is close to major commuting routes, and many serious injuries happen during the daily rhythm of getting to work, school, appointments, and back home. In fracture cases, the “timeline” is everything—what happened first, how quickly you were seen, and whether the mechanism of injury matches the medical findings.
Insurers frequently argue one of two things:
- The fracture was pre-existing or not caused by the incident.
- The injury didn’t happen the way you say it did (or it wasn’t severe enough).
That’s why we focus early on documenting:
- the incident details (where, how, and what you were doing)
- emergency/urgent care records and imaging reports
- consistency between symptoms, treatment, and the fracture diagnosis


