Prichard’s neighborhoods, traffic patterns, and frequent local foot traffic mean broken bone injuries often occur in predictable ways:
- Traffic collisions and turning crashes on busier corridors, where impact timing can become a dispute.
- Pedestrian and crosswalk hazards near shopping areas, parking lots, and transit-adjacent locations.
- Store and property accidents tied to wet floors, uneven walkways, or inadequate cleanup/warning.
- Construction and industrial workforce injuries, including falls, equipment-related impacts, and inadequate safety follow-through.
In each of these situations, the insurance company may argue the injury is minor, unrelated, or “already healing.” A strong Prichard case usually requires tying the mechanism of injury (how it happened) to the medical findings (what the imaging and clinicians documented).


