Clovis has a mix of daily commuting and longer-distance travel. That often means neck and back injuries show up after:
- Rear-end collisions on busy stretches where sudden stops are common
- Lane-change and merging crashes that add twisting forces to the spine
- Truck-related impacts that can create higher-impact forces than drivers expect
- Night and weekend driving when visibility and attention can be worse after events
In these scenarios, the dispute often isn’t whether you feel pain—it’s whether the other side claims your symptoms are unrelated, exaggerated, or caused by something else. We build the case around what Clovis residents actually experience after a crash: the timeline of symptoms, documented treatment, and functional limits that affect work and daily life.


