US/50 · Federal & State Coverage

// INJURY FILE

SERIOUS INJURY

Broken Bones & Fractures
claims after a truck accident.

Truck accidents frequently cause fractures to arms, legs, pelvis, ribs, and skull.

// 01 / COMPENSATION

What compensation can you claim for broken bones & fractures?

Fracture claims include surgical costs, hardware removal, physical therapy, and lost wages during recovery. Permanent hardware or reduced range of motion adds non-economic damages. Multiple fractures significantly increase settlement value.

// 02 / INJURY EVIDENCE

Specific evidence for broken bones & fractures

X-rays, CT scans, surgical records, physical therapy notes.

// 03 / EVIDENCE — SHARED

What evidence proves your injury in a truck accident claim

Regardless of injury type, the core evidence in every truck accident injury claim follows the same pattern:

// EVIDENCE

Medical records from day 1

Emergency room or urgent care records from the date of the accident establish the causal link between the crash and your injury. Delayed treatment is routinely used by insurers to argue the injury was pre-existing or not serious.

// EVIDENCE

Consistent treatment history

Regular GP visits, specialist appointments, and therapy records demonstrate the injury's ongoing impact. Gaps in treatment are used to argue you recovered.

// EVIDENCE

Expert medical testimony

For serious injuries, a treating specialist or independent medical expert will typically be required to testify about the nature, permanence, and future care needs of your injury.

// EVIDENCE

Functional impact evidence

Records showing how the injury affects daily life — work absences, inability to perform activities, caregiver costs — support both economic and non-economic damages.

// EVIDENCE

Photographs and video

Visual documentation of your injuries at each stage of recovery. Many claimants underestimate the value of regular injury photographs throughout treatment.

// 04 / PRE-EXISTING CONDITIONS

Pre-existing conditions and your claim

Insurance companies frequently argue that your injuries are pre-existing conditions unrelated to the truck accident. The 'eggshell plaintiff' rule — recognised in all US states — means that a defendant must take the victim as they find them. If the truck accident aggravated or accelerated a pre-existing condition, you are entitled to compensation for the worsening caused by the accident, even if you were not perfectly healthy before. Detailed medical records comparing your condition before and after the accident are the key evidence.

// 05 / SETTLEMENT VALUE

How broken bones & fractures affects your settlement value

Settlement value depends heavily on fracture severity and recovery outcome.

Settlement value is driven by three things: (1) the medical reality documented in your records, (2) the projected future cost of treatment and care, and (3) how your earning capacity changes as a result of the injury. Catastrophic injuries reach the highest awards because all three are large; moderate injuries depend almost entirely on consistent medical documentation to defeat insurer pushback.

// 05 / FREE REVIEW

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// FORM / TAC-001

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By submitting, you agree to be contacted about your potential claim. This is not legal advice and does not create an attorney-client relationship.

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