Yankton’s roads and busy local corridors mean broken bones are frequently tied to collisions and sudden impacts—whether it’s a turn at an intersection, a winter-time slip, a distracted driver moment, or a work zone incident. In many injury claims, the dispute isn’t whether you were hurt—it’s whether the other party’s conduct caused the fracture.
Insurers may argue:
- the injury was pre-existing or unrelated,
- the mechanism of injury doesn’t match imaging,
- your symptoms were delayed or underreported,
- you returned to activity too soon.
Your next steps should be about building a timeline that connects the incident to the diagnosis and treatment plan.


