Injuries from commuting routes, intersections, and pedestrian-heavy areas can look straightforward at first—until the records start telling a different story. After a crash on a busy corridor, a slip on a sidewalk, or a workplace incident, insurers may argue that:
- the fracture was unrelated to the event,
- the injury was pre-existing,
- or the symptoms didn’t begin when you say they did.
In Danbury, that dispute often becomes a medical-record timeline problem. The quicker you act and the more consistent your follow-up care is, the stronger your ability to connect the fracture to the incident.


