Richland residents spend time on busy roadways and predictable routes—commutes, shift changes, and errands between home and work. That matters because broken bone injuries often come from:
- Rear-end collisions on commuter stretches
- Intersection impacts when traffic patterns change suddenly
- Crosswalk and pedestrian incidents near retail and office corridors
- Work-related driving for industrial or field jobs
In these cases, insurers may argue the fracture is unrelated, minor, or not consistent with the crash. Your medical records and the timing of symptoms become critical—because Washington claims often turn on what can be proven, not what’s assumed.


