In Medford, many internal injury cases begin with the same pattern: a collision or sudden impact during a work commute or errands, followed by delayed pain—sometimes in the chest, abdomen, back, or head/neck area.
Insurance adjusters may try to treat internal injuries as “soft” or temporary because there’s no dramatic external wound. But internal damage can exist even when bruising is minimal. The key is building a claim that matches:
- How the impact happened (speed, angle, seatbelt/airbag, fall distance if a person was thrown)
- When symptoms started (hours vs. days)
- What medical testing showed (imaging, bloodwork, clinician impressions)
When those pieces don’t align neatly on paper, the defense often argues the timeline doesn’t make sense. That’s where local, evidence-focused case building matters.


