Broken-bone injuries can look straightforward at first—until fault and causation are disputed. In practice, insurers frequently argue one of the following:
- the injury was unrelated to the incident
- the fracture was pre-existing
- the treatment timeline doesn’t match the “story”
- the injury was “minor,” even when imaging and ortho follow-ups show otherwise
East Ridge cases often involve mixed facts—like where a person was standing in a parking lot, how quickly a hazard was reported, or how impact forces in a vehicle crash line up with the medical findings. That’s why the early phase matters: what you document, what you say, and how quickly your medical timeline is built.


