In a lot of local neck and back injury cases, the dispute isn’t whether you hurt. It’s when the symptoms started, how they changed, and whether they match the incident.
After a collision—whether it happened on a state route, at an intersection, or in a parking lot—defense counsel may argue that pain was delayed, exaggerated, or caused by something unrelated. The same issue can arise after workplace incidents involving awkward lifting, slips, or being jolted by equipment.
What helps most:
- Your first medical visit timing and what you reported
- Consistency between your symptoms and the documented exam findings
- Records showing follow-through (not just one appointment)
If you’re trying to decide whether you have a claim, the key question is simple: does your medical record tell a believable story that connects to what happened in Defiance?


