Wooster sees its share of traffic patterns and everyday hazards—commuter routes, intersections with heavy turn traffic, and properties where pedestrians cross near storefronts and parking areas. In these situations, the other side may argue:
- you were partly responsible for the crash or fall,
- the fracture was caused by something unrelated,
- the injury doesn’t match the incident details,
- or your symptoms were “getting better” before treatment was complete.
When a fracture is involved, those arguments can quickly affect settlement value.
Key point: insurers rarely pay based only on the diagnosis. They pay based on documented injury, credible causation, and consistent records.


