In many personal injury claims involving broken bones, insurers move fast because they think the injury is “simple.” In reality, fractures can lead to complications that show up later—stiffness, delayed healing, nerve involvement, or the need for additional imaging and therapy.
In Mercedes and the surrounding Rio Grande Valley area, disputes often turn on:
- Timing: whether symptoms appeared right after the incident or were documented later.
- Mechanism: whether the way the injury happened matches the fracture pattern doctors describe.
- Treatment continuity: whether follow-up appointments and imaging were completed.
- Comparative fault arguments: claims that your actions contributed to the accident.
When those issues come up, a claim can stall unless the medical timeline and incident evidence are assembled in a way insurers can’t easily dismiss.


