Broken bone injuries often involve a timing gap: the accident happens, you get treated, and then insurers start questioning whether the fracture truly matches the incident.
In Sanford, that dispute commonly shows up in cases involving:
- Commuter traffic and rear-end collisions on major routes where symptoms may not peak until hours later
- Residential slip-and-fall incidents (wet entries, loose steps, ice-and-debris cleanup issues)
- Workplace injuries connected to industrial schedules, delivery routes, or equipment handling
- Construction and property maintenance environments where “who was responsible for the hazard” becomes the fight
When fault or causation is contested, the case turns on documentation and consistency—not guesswork.


