Dixon’s mix of residential streets, school zones, and roads that connect commuters to the Bay Area and Sacramento region means collisions often involve:
- Rear-end impacts and sudden braking (common causes of ankle, wrist, and back injuries)
- Intersection and cross-traffic collisions (where the fracture mechanism may be questioned)
- Lane-change and merging events near busier corridors (where fault is frequently contested)
- Pedestrian and cyclist involvement during local activity (including falls that cause fractures)
In these cases, insurers may try to narrow the story—arguing the fracture is unrelated, pre-existing, or not severe enough to justify the medical course you’ve actually needed. That’s why your claim needs more than “I broke my bone.” It needs a tight, credible timeline connecting the crash to the diagnosis and treatment.


