Richfield sits within reach of regional commuting routes, and that means crash patterns often look familiar:
- Rear-end collisions from late braking or distracted driving during stop-and-go traffic
- Lane changes and merge collisions where traffic flow suddenly compresses
- Construction-zone impacts where drivers are forced into temporary detours or altered sightlines
- Low-speed “minor” impacts that still produce serious soft-tissue injury and delayed pain
Insurers often minimize these incidents by calling them “minor” or by emphasizing the lack of immediate medical severity. But in practice, neck and back injuries can worsen after inflammation settles, muscle guarding takes over, or headaches/nerve symptoms begin. A strong claim in Richfield usually depends on documenting that progression early and consistently.


