Many serious internal injury cases start with an experience that felt minor in the moment—then worsened later the same day or over the next several days. In our region, that can happen after:
- Rear-end and side-impact crashes on commuting routes where impact is sudden but initial pain is dismissed as “shock.”
- Falls from porches, steps, docks, or uneven outdoor surfaces, especially when weather changes create slick footing.
- On-the-job impacts involving equipment, lifting, or slips in warehouses and industrial settings.
- Sports and recreation injuries where soreness is expected—until fatigue, dizziness, abdominal pain, or breathing issues escalate.
The key issue is timing: insurance adjusters may argue that a later diagnosis proves it wasn’t caused by the event. A strong Bainbridge case focuses on connecting the incident mechanics to the medical timeline—so the story makes sense to both doctors and adjusters.


