Sanger residents commonly travel along nearby routes for work, school, and errands. When a fracture happens in a car crash, truck incident, or a collision at an intersection, the dispute usually isn’t about whether you were hurt—it’s about how the crash caused the specific fracture.
In these cases, insurers may argue:
- the impact wasn’t consistent with the injury you received,
- the fracture is unrelated to the accident,
- or your treatment timeline changed because of something other than the crash.
To protect your claim, your lawyer needs to connect three things quickly:
- the incident story (what happened),
- the medical timeline (when and how the fracture was diagnosed), and
- the documentation (imaging, follow-ups, and work impact).


