Beverly’s roadways can be fast-moving and busy, especially during commute hours and around areas with frequent turns, merges, and pedestrian activity. Neck and back injuries commonly occur in:
- Rear-end collisions on Route 1 and surrounding connector roads (whiplash and soft-tissue injuries)
- Lane-change and intersection crashes where sudden braking triggers neck strain
- Truck or commercial vehicle impacts that can cause more forceful spinal injury
- Crosswalk and sidewalk incidents involving distracted drivers or poor visibility
- Construction-zone traffic where detours, narrowed lanes, and sudden stop-and-go increase collision risk
Even when the crash seems minor at first, symptoms often worsen over the next days as inflammation builds. That timing matters for claims, medical documentation, and causation arguments.


