Broken bones in the Buffalo-area frequently come with a familiar pattern: sudden impacts, limited visibility, and complex fault questions.
In Tonawanda, that can look like:
- collisions involving drivers changing lanes near busier corridors
- pedestrian or cyclist injuries around crossings and commercial areas
- crashes influenced by construction activity, detours, or changed traffic patterns
When a fracture case involves traffic, insurers typically scrutinize speed, lane position, and causation. That means your early documentation—medical records plus incident details—can be the difference between a claim that moves forward and one that gets delayed or minimized.


