Foley residents are on the move—commuting to work, running errands, and traveling to the Gulf Coast. That means neck and back injuries frequently come from the same real-world patterns:
- Rear-end collisions on busy corridors and stop-and-go traffic, where whiplash and disc irritation are common
- Lane-change and turning impacts near shopping areas, where braking distance and visibility become the issue
- Truck traffic connected to deliveries and industrial routes, which can create higher-impact forces
- Worksite strains in construction, warehouses, and industrial settings where awkward lifting or sudden jostling can trigger symptoms
When an injury involves the spine, the insurance defense often focuses on whether your symptoms “match” the story. Your job is to get care; your claim should be built around the evidence.


