Broken bones don’t always present perfectly at first. Swelling, bruising, and “it might be fine” moments can delay proper care—especially when you’re dealing with commuting schedules or family responsibilities.
Do these things early (today if you can):
- Get imaging and diagnosis as soon as medically appropriate. Ask whether X-rays/CT are needed and keep copies of the reports.
- Write a time-stamped incident account while the details are fresh: where you were, what happened, and how the injury occurred.
- Preserve the Ridgefield-specific evidence you can: photos of the surface condition (snow/ice, uneven pavement, debris), vehicle damage, lighting conditions, and any signage/warnings.
- Keep employer documentation if the injury affects your shift, overtime, or duties.
- Avoid recorded statements to the other side’s insurer until you understand what they’re disputing.
Even if you already went to urgent care, the legal value often depends on whether the medical record clearly ties the fracture to the incident and explains progression over time.


