Every injury has its own facts, but Cambridge has recurring risk patterns. If any of these sound familiar, it’s worth getting legal guidance early:
- Pedestrian and crosswalk collisions: Sudden impacts while walking or crossing busy intersections can cause wrist, ankle, rib, or hip fractures.
- Ride-share, taxi, and commuter vehicle crashes: Cambridge commuters rely on rides and regional transit connections; impacts can lead to displaced fractures that worsen without proper immobilization.
- Trip-and-fall injuries near retail and mixed-use streets: Uneven sidewalks, temporary barriers, and late-cleanup hazards are frequent sources of ankle and foot fractures.
- Construction-zone slip or impact injuries: Work crews and active sites create risks from debris, wet surfaces, and blocked paths—especially when pedestrians are rerouted.
- Falls involving stairs, entryways, and property walkways: Apartment buildings and multi-family properties can have hazards that aren’t obvious until someone falls.
The key point: insurers may say the injury “should have healed by now” or claim it’s unrelated. In Cambridge, where medical access and mobility are both time-sensitive, the timeline and documentation matter.


