In central Maine, many serious injuries occur during predictable travel moments—morning commutes, evening return trips, and school/daytime traffic. Broken bones are commonly reported after:
- Rear-end and side-impact crashes where the injury mechanism is disputed
- Crosswalk and pedestrian collisions near higher-activity corridors
- Slip-and-fall events connected to winter traction problems (ice melt, wet floors, uneven surfaces)
- Work and delivery incidents involving ramps, loading areas, or equipment movement
Insurers may argue that your fracture is unrelated or that the impact “couldn’t” cause the specific injury you received. In a Waterville claim, the strongest cases usually connect how the incident happened to how the fracture was diagnosed, using consistent medical records and incident evidence.


