In internal injury cases, the “when” matters as much as the “what.” Many people in Tifton—whether they commute to work, handle farm or industrial duties, or spend time on foot around town—don’t seek immediate care after a collision or fall. Sometimes that’s because symptoms start mild. Other times it’s because life moves fast and appointments are delayed.
When symptoms show up later, the defense typically argues:
- you had a pre-existing condition,
- the injury wasn’t caused by the incident,
- or the delay suggests the diagnosis is unrelated.
A strong claim counters that argument by aligning:
- the event mechanics (how the force happened),
- the symptom progression (how it changed over time),
- and the medical findings (what clinicians observed and when).
That alignment is what can move your case from “unclear” to “medically supported.”


