In many Ferndale cases, the dispute isn’t whether you hurt—it’s whether the injury is connected to the incident and how quickly you got evaluated.
After a crash or workplace incident, people sometimes wait to see if symptoms “settle down,” especially if the first day feels manageable. But in insurance negotiations, a delayed treatment gap can give adjusters an argument that the incident didn’t cause (or didn’t worsen) your condition.
We focus on building a straightforward timeline:
- what happened in the minutes/hours after the incident
- when symptoms started or escalated
- when you sought care and what clinicians documented
- how your function changed (driving, work tasks, sleep, lifting, walking)
That timeline is often the difference between a claim that gets pressured into an early compromise and one that’s taken seriously.


