Injury claims involving permanent impairment require more than proving that an accident occurred. They must connect the incident to ongoing symptoms and show the real cost of recovery over time—medical care, therapy, home and mobility changes, and the effect on work and daily independence.
For Fitchburg families, that often means dealing with:
- Commute disruption (lost income, retraining, altered job duties)
- Long-term care needs (rehab schedules, attendant care, assistive devices)
- Home and transportation modifications (access changes, specialized equipment)
- Disputes over causation (defense arguments that symptoms are unrelated or temporary)
The sooner evidence is organized and liability is evaluated, the better positioned you are for negotiations that don’t undervalue future harm.


