Broken bones in New Haven often come from patterns that look routine until an accident happens:
- Pedestrian and crosswalk incidents: High foot traffic near downtown and university-adjacent areas can turn a minor collision into a serious injury like a wrist fracture, ankle fracture, or hip injury.
- Commuter traffic and turns: Collisions involving lane changes, sudden stops, or failure to yield can cause fractures that worsen when people delay proper immobilization.
- Property hazards in dense neighborhoods: Uneven sidewalks, poor lighting, snow/ice conditions, and unattended hazards are common triggers for falls—sometimes leading to fractures that require surgery or long-term physical therapy.
- Work zone and construction impacts: When roadways and sidewalks are under active maintenance, impact injuries can happen quickly, and evidence may be time-sensitive (photos, signage, witness accounts).
If your fracture happened in one of these settings, you need a claim built around how the incident occurred and how the medical findings match that mechanism of injury.


