Many Keene residents are involved in the same types of situations that generate cervical and back injuries—often with symptoms that don’t fully show up until later.
Common examples include:
- Rear-end and stop-and-go traffic on Route 9, Main Street corridors, and commuter routes—where sudden braking can trigger whiplash and muscle/ligament strain.
- Parking lot collisions around stores, offices, and event venues—where visibility issues and low-speed impacts still cause real spinal trauma.
- Slip-and-fall injuries on icy walkways, uneven sidewalks, and poorly maintained entrances during New Hampshire weather transitions.
- Construction and industrial workforce injuries tied to lifting, repetitive strain, awkward postures, and sudden jolts.
- Tourism/event-related crowding (seasonal downtown activity) that increases the chance of jostling, falls, or collisions in pedestrian-heavy areas.
In all of these scenarios, the key question becomes: what happened, when symptoms started, and how the medical record connects your injury to the incident.


