Fractures don’t just “hurt.” They create timelines—ER evaluation, imaging, immobilization, follow-up visits, possible surgery, and rehabilitation. In Cumming, disputes frequently arise when:
- the first medical note is brief or doesn’t clearly connect the mechanism of injury to the fracture,
- insurers argue the injury was pre-existing or unrelated,
- treatment was delayed due to scheduling or transportation barriers,
- the accident description changes slightly between reports (often unintentionally).
A strong claim usually depends on building a consistent record early: what happened, when symptoms started, what the imaging shows, and how treatment followed logically from the injury.


