In Pennsylvania, insurers frequently look for inconsistencies between an accident timeline and medical documentation—especially when symptoms appear hours later or evolve over several days. In Scranton, that problem can be worse during seasonal weather shifts (freeze-thaw cycles, snow melt, and icy sidewalks) because people may delay treatment, assume soreness is “normal,” or wait to see if symptoms pass.
When internal injuries are involved—such as bleeding, organ strain, or tissue damage—the delay can be medically explained, but it must be supported. That means your record should reflect:
- When you first noticed symptoms
- What clinicians observed and ordered (imaging, labs, follow-ups)
- Whether the injury pattern fits the force of the incident
If the documentation is thin or the timeline is unclear, defense teams may argue the condition was unrelated. Your lawyer’s job is to prevent that narrative by organizing evidence early and prompting the right questions.


