Broken bones in Douglas commonly result from rear-end collisions, lane-change crashes, slip-and-trip incidents outside businesses, or industrial and warehouse injuries. The first hours after the incident can make or break a claim because:
- Surveillance footage gets overwritten quickly.
- Witness memories fade.
- Medical records may start “generic” until imaging confirms the specific fracture.
- Insurers may suggest the injury “wasn’t caused by the crash” or was “pre-existing.”
If you’ve been told your fracture is minor or unrelated, don’t assume that’s the end of the story. A correct claim depends on matching the mechanism of injury to the medical findings.


