In a suburban Detroit-area setting, broken bone injuries frequently involve common risk patterns:
- Commuting collisions on busy corridors (rear-end impacts, lane-change disputes, and stop-and-go traffic)
- Residential property hazards—uneven sidewalks, ice in shaded areas, broken handrails, and loose pavement near entrances
- Worksite and contractor injuries in industrial and commercial areas, including falls from improper setup or unsafe conditions
When a fracture happens, the dispute is often not whether you’re hurt—it’s whether the incident caused the fracture and whether the full impact was foreseeable. After an injury, adjusters may argue the harm is unrelated, exaggerate gaps in treatment, or suggest you were “fine” before the crash or fall.


