Lancaster residents don’t just drive on highways—many are commuting through mixed traffic: local roads, intersections, school zones, and routes that connect to nearby employment. Broken bones frequently result from:
- Intersection impacts (turning vehicles, late braking, unclear right-of-way)
- Rear-end collisions that jolt the body and aggravate existing conditions
- Construction-zone traffic shifts that force sudden lane changes
- Pedestrian and crosswalk incidents near retail corridors and busy downtown areas
When the insurer disputes causation—claiming the fracture was “pre-existing” or “unrelated”—your case often turns on whether the timeline and physical evidence match what the medical records show.


