Broken bones can look straightforward on day one—until insurance companies start questioning timing, cause, and severity. In Westbrook, that dispute commonly shows up after:
- Rear-end crashes and lane-change collisions near major commuter corridors
- Slip-and-fall injuries on wet pavement during shoulder seasons
- Parking lot and driveway accidents at retail areas and multi-family properties
- Construction-adjacent incidents where work zones weren’t properly controlled or marked
- Pedestrian and crosswalk injuries where impacts are sudden and records are incomplete
The early narrative matters. If your medical record doesn’t line up with the incident details, adjusters may argue the fracture was unrelated or worsened later. Your lawyer’s job is to keep your story consistent with the medical timeline and the evidence available.


