In the real world, people in Elmwood Park often don’t rush back to the doctor after an accident because symptoms feel manageable—or because they’re trying to get through work. That pattern can create problems in internal injury claims.
Why? Many internal injuries don’t announce themselves immediately. You might feel okay at the scene, then later experience:
- increasing abdominal or chest pain,
- dizziness or weakness,
- headaches after a blow to the head,
- nausea, bruising that appears later, or worsening shortness of breath.
Insurance adjusters may argue that a delayed evaluation means the injury wasn’t caused by the incident. Your case improves when your medical records show a reasonable progression: what changed, when it changed, and how clinicians connected those symptoms to traumatic impact.
Practical takeaway: If symptoms change after a crash, fall, or workplace incident, treat follow-up care as part of the evidence—not just treatment.


