A fractured wrist from a slip on black ice keeps you from typing at work for months. A compound leg fracture from a T-bone collision forces you into a wheelchair while bones heal at an agonizing pace.
Broken bones aren’t just inconvenient—they derail your income, disrupt your family’s routine, and create a cascade of medical bills that pile up faster than you can pay them.
At Ganim Legal, P.C., our Bridgeport broken bone lawyers understand that insurance companies often dismiss fractures as “minor injuries” that heal on their own, pressuring you to accept settlements that won’t cover surgery, physical therapy, or the wages you’ve already lost
Without experienced legal representation pushing back against these tactics, you risk accepting far less than your case is worth—leaving you financially vulnerable when complications arise or healing takes longer than expected.
As an experienced Bridgeport personal injury lawyer, we fight to secure full compensation for your medical treatment, lost income, and pain while you focus on recovery.
Call us at 203-884-7075 or contact us online for a free consultation with a Bridgeport broken bone lawyer who will protect your rights.
Do You Have Grounds For a Broken Bone Claim?
To pursue compensation for your broken bone injury, our legal team must establish four critical elements that form the foundation of your claim:
- Duty of care: The responsible party owed you a legal obligation to act reasonably—drivers must follow traffic laws, property owners must maintain safe premises, employers must provide hazard-free workplaces, and manufacturers must design products that don’t cause harm. Connecticut law recognizes these duties across virtually all personal injury contexts.
- Breach of duty: The at-fault party violated their duty through negligent actions like running a red light, failing to salt icy walkways, ignoring OSHA safety protocols, or releasing defective equipment into the marketplace. Evidence of this breach becomes the cornerstone of your claim.
- Causation: Your fracture must directly result from the breach—the collision actually broke your femur, the wet floor actually caused your fall and shattered your wrist, or the faulty ladder actually collapsed and fractured your spine. Connecticut’s comparative negligence rules require proving this direct connection.
- Damages: You suffered quantifiable losses, including emergency room visits, orthopedic consultations, casting or surgical hardware, immobilization periods that prevented work, physical therapy sessions, and ongoing pain that diminishes your quality of life. Documentation of these damages determines your compensation amount.
Damages You Can Recover
Connecticut law allows broken bone victims to pursue three categories of compensation, each addressing different aspects of your injury’s impact:
- Economic damages: These cover all measurable financial losses, including emergency department care, diagnostic imaging like X-rays and CT scans, orthopedic specialist consultations, casting or splinting materials, surgical procedures to insert plates and screws, anesthesia costs, prescription medications, physical rehabilitation sessions, home health aide services, medical equipment rentals, and both past and future lost wages. We calculate these damages using actual bills, pay stubs, and expert testimony about ongoing treatment needs.
- Non-economic damages: Connecticut places no cap on compensation for pain and suffering, physical discomfort during healing, inability to participate in activities you once enjoyed, loss of independence while immobilized, emotional distress from permanent scarring or disfigurement, and reduced quality of life when fractures don’t heal properly. These damages often exceed economic losses in severe fracture cases.
- Punitive damages: Courts rarely award punitive damages in personal injury cases, reserving them for situations where the defendant’s conduct was reckless, malicious, or demonstrated willful disregard for others’ safety—such as drunk driving accidents or employers who knowingly violated safety regulations. These damages punish wrongdoers rather than compensate victims.
How Much Compensation Can You Expect?
Settlement values vary based on fracture severity, treatment complexity, recovery duration, and long-term complications, but the following ranges provide general guidance:
| Type of Broken Bone Injury | Typical Compensation Range |
|---|---|
| Minor non-displaced fracture | $3,000 – $10,000 |
| Displaced fracture | $10,000 – $75,000 |
| Compound fracture | $50,000 – $75,000 |
| Fracture requiring surgery | $75,000 – $100,000 |
| Multiple fractures | $100,000 – $500,000+ |
Some of our cases have significantly exceeded these averages when circumstances warranted higher compensation:
- $900,000.00: The Plaintiff, a 46-year-old woman, was awarded $900,000 via settlement after falling in the kitchen of the Milford Cracker Barrel. The Plaintiff, a waitress at the restaurant, was carrying a stack of dishes when she fell over broken floor tiles and suffered serious back and spinal injuries as a result.
- $283,544.00: The Plaintiff, a 40-year-old man, was awarded $283,544.00 plus interest after being rear-ended while stopped at a red light on East Main Street in Stamford. The Defendant failed to keep a proper lookout and was traveling at an unreasonable speed at the time of the accident.
- $590,000: The Plaintiff, a 38-year-old man, reached a $590,000 settlement with his employer after suffering serious injuries in a work-related accident. The Plaintiff was working on a garbage truck when the driver struck a utility pole, crushing the Plaintiff’s arm.
💡 For an estimate of what your broken bone case might be worth based on your specific circumstances, try our realistic settlement calculator below.
Selected Value: 0%
Disclaimer: Settlement amounts depend on individual case factors, including injury severity, defendant liability, available insurance coverage, and jurisdiction-specific considerations. Past results do not guarantee similar outcomes for future cases, and each claim requires independent evaluation by qualified legal counsel.
How to Get in Touch With Our Bridgeport Broken Bone Lawyer
We make it easy to discuss your case through multiple contact methods:
- Telephone: Call us directly at 203-884-7075 to speak with a member of our legal team
- Online contact form: Submit your information through our contact page, and we’ll respond promptly
- Free consultation: All initial case evaluations are completely free with no obligation—we’ll assess your claim, explain your options, and answer your questions
Go With Who You Know—contact Park Avenue Paul today for your free consultation.
Common Types of Broken Bone Cases We Handle
Our firm has successfully represented clients with virtually every type of fracture injury, though we particularly focus on the following common categories:
- Comminuted fractures
- Compound (open) fractures
- Crush injuries involving multiple fractures
- Displaced fractures
- Growth plate fractures in children
- Simple fractures
- Stress fractures
How Our Bridgeport Broken Bone Law Firm Can Help
When you hire Ganim Legal, P.C., our team takes comprehensive action to maximize your compensation:
- Calculating time off work and future earning limitations
- Coordinating with medical experts to document injury severity
- Countering insurance company “minor injury” arguments with evidence
- Documenting all recovery setbacks and complications
- Helping secure payment for emergency treatment and ongoing care
- Proving fracture severity through imaging and specialist testimony
- Recovering compensation for lost wages during immobilization
- Securing coverage for property damage when applicable
- Supporting your emotional recovery by handling legal stress
Myth vs Facts Relating to Broken Bone Claims
Insurance adjusters and defense attorneys often rely on common misconceptions to reduce claim values. Understanding the truth protects your rights:
| Myth | Fact |
|---|---|
| “Broken bones always heal completely within a few weeks.” | Many fractures require 3–6 months for full recovery, and complications such as non-union or malunion can cause permanent limitations that justify ongoing compensation. |
| “You can’t file a claim if the fracture already healed.” | Connecticut law allows claims for pain during healing, permanent scarring, reduced range of motion, chronic pain, and increased arthritis risk—all compensable even after bone union. |
| “Surgery is required to have a valid claim.” | Non-surgical fractures still warrant compensation for casting costs, immobilization periods, lost wages, and pain; many conservatively treated fractures result in substantial settlements. |
| “If you’re partly at fault, you can’t recover anything.” | Connecticut’s modified comparative negligence rule permits recovery as long as fault does not exceed 50%, with damages reduced proportionally to the claimant’s degree of responsibility. |
Your First Actions After a Bridgeport Broken Bone Injury
Once you’ve received emergency medical care, take these important steps to protect both your health and your legal rights:
- Contact Ganim Legal, P.C. immediately: Early legal consultation ensures you meet Connecticut’s strict deadlines and avoid mistakes that jeopardize your claim. We guide you through the process while the evidence is fresh and statute of limitations concerns remain manageable.
- Follow all orthopedic treatment recommendations: Attend every scheduled appointment, comply with immobilization instructions, and complete prescribed physical therapy—insurance companies scrutinize treatment gaps to argue your injury wasn’t serious. Missing appointments or discontinuing therapy prematurely damages your claim’s credibility.
- Document your pain levels and limitations accurately: Tell doctors about all symptoms, including pain intensity, mobility restrictions, sleep disruptions, and activity limitations—medical records stating “minimal pain” or “doing well” undervalue your claim. Honest, detailed symptom reporting creates documentation that supports fair compensation.
- Refuse early settlement offers without legal review: Insurance adjusters often pressure injured victims to accept quick settlements before the full extent of injuries becomes apparent—these early offers rarely account for surgical complications, extended healing, or permanent limitations. Let us evaluate any offer before you sign the release documents.
- Preserve all evidence related to your injury: Keep copies of emergency room records, orthopedic notes, imaging results, prescription receipts, work absence documentation, and photographs of the accident scene—this evidence becomes critical when building your case. Digital photos, witness contact information, and incident reports all strengthen your claim.
- Track every expense and impact: Maintain detailed records of medical bills, prescription costs, transportation to appointments, home modifications needed during recovery, and lost income—these expenses add up quickly and must be documented to ensure full reimbursement. A simple spreadsheet or folder system helps capture everything.
- Avoid discussing your case on social media: Insurance companies monitor claimants’ social media profiles for posts that contradict injury claims—photos of activities, check-ins at events, or statements about feeling better can be weaponized to reduce your settlement. Privacy settings don’t guarantee protection from surveillance.
Contact Ganim Legal, P.C. now to ensure you take every step necessary to protect your claim.
Insurance Company Tactics to Be Aware Of
⚖️ Insurance adjusters employ predictable strategies to minimize fracture claim payouts, and our experience handling hundreds of cases has revealed their most common approaches.
Based on decades of representing injured clients, we’ve identified these tactics that insurers use to reduce settlements:
- Downplaying fracture severity: Adjusters characterize serious fractures as “simple breaks” that heal quickly, ignoring complications, surgical interventions, or permanent limitations your doctors have documented. We counter this by presenting comprehensive medical evidence, including imaging, specialist opinions, and functional capacity evaluations.
- Disputing work restrictions: Insurance companies question whether your doctor’s activity limitations are truly necessary, pressuring you to return to work before medically appropriate. We work with your treating physicians to document why restrictions protect your healing and prevent re-injury.
- Offering quick settlements before surgery: Adjusters rush to settle claims immediately after diagnosis, before you know whether conservative treatment will fail and surgery will become necessary. These early offers never account for the substantially higher costs of surgical intervention.
- Conducting surveillance after cast removal: Once your external cast comes off, insurers may hire investigators to film your activities, hoping to catch you performing tasks that contradict your claimed limitations. Even minor activities can be edited to appear more strenuous than they actually were.
What if the Insurance Company Says the Bone Healed?
Insurance adjusters frequently argue that once imaging shows bone union, your claim should be worth less—but Connecticut law recognizes multiple compensable issues that persist after radiographic healing:
- Chronic pain despite bone union: Many fracture patients experience ongoing pain, weakness, or discomfort long after X-rays show healed bones, particularly in weight-bearing joints or areas where hardware was installed. This chronic pain remains compensable even when imaging appears normal.
- Reduced strength or range of motion: Fractured bones often heal with permanent functional limitations, including decreased flexibility, reduced grip strength, or limited weight-bearing capacity that impacts your work and daily activities. These limitations justify ongoing compensation.
- Increased arthritis risk: Fractures involving joint surfaces significantly increase your risk of developing post-traumatic arthritis years after the injury heals, potentially requiring joint replacement surgery decades later. Connecticut law allows compensation for this future medical risk.
- Aggravation of prior injuries: If your fracture occurred in an area with previous injury, healing may be complicated or incomplete, creating permanent damage exceeding what existed before the accident. Defendants remain liable for aggravating pre-existing conditions.
Your Deadline For Filing a Claim
Connecticut General Statutes § 52-584 generally requires personal injury lawsuits to be filed within two years from the date the injury is discovered, or reasonably should have been discovered.
In addition, Connecticut law imposes an outside deadline that typically bars claims filed more than three years from the date of the negligent act or omission. Missing these deadlines can permanently eliminate your right to compensation, regardless of how severe your injuries may be.
Claims involving government entities are subject to even shorter notice requirements. Lawsuits against Connecticut state agencies typically require written notice within one year, while many municipal claims require notice within six months.
Certain highway defect claims impose notice deadlines as short as 90 days. These deadlines continue to run even while you are recovering from serious injuries, making early legal guidance critical to protecting your rights.
Gathering Evidence
Building a strong broken bone claim requires comprehensive documentation that proves both the accident’s cause and your injury’s severity:
Our legal team needs access to diagnostic imaging, including initial X-rays, CT scans showing fracture displacement, MRI results if soft tissue damage occurred, and follow-up imaging documenting healing progress or complications. These images provide objective proof of fracture severity and treatment necessity.
We also collect orthopedic consultation notes that detail your injury’s extent, surgical operative reports describing hardware placement or reduction procedures, physical therapy records tracking your recovery limitations, work restriction documentation from your physician, hospital discharge summaries, prescription records showing pain management needs, and employer statements confirming lost wages or modified duty assignments.
Gathering this evidence while managing pain, attending appointments, and worrying about bills creates overwhelming stress during an already difficult time.
We can handle the documentation burden while you focus entirely on healing—our team has systems in place to obtain records, coordinate with providers, and build your case without adding to your responsibilities.
What Can I Expect to Pay?
Ganim Legal, P.C. represents broken bone injury victims on a contingency fee basis, meaning you pay nothing upfront and we only collect attorney fees if we successfully recover compensation for you.
This arrangement ensures everyone has access to quality legal representation regardless of their financial situation—you’ll never receive a bill for our time if your case doesn’t result in a settlement or verdict.
Our fee comes as a percentage of your final recovery, and we advance all case expenses, including medical record costs, expert witness fees, court filing fees, and investigation expenses, without requiring reimbursement unless we win.
📌 This contingency structure aligns our interests with yours—the better your settlement, the better our fee—motivating us to maximize your recovery.
Who Pays For Your Medical Bills While Your Case is Pending?
Many clients worry about how they’ll afford ongoing treatment while their case works through the legal system, but several options typically cover care during this period:
Your health insurance policy generally covers emergency room treatment, orthopedic consultations, casting, surgery, and rehabilitation just as it would for any medical condition. Connecticut law allows health insurers to place liens on injury settlements, meaning they recover their expenses from your final award—but they can’t deny coverage simply because someone else caused your injury.
If your broken bone resulted from a motor vehicle accident, Personal Injury Protection (PIP) coverage under your auto policy may pay up to $50,000 in immediate medical expenses regardless of fault, with no reimbursement required if you settle.
Some providers also offer medical liens or deferred payment arrangements where treatment proceeds now, and bills get paid from your settlement later.
Our Process For Handling Your Case
When you hire Ganim Legal, P.C., we follow a comprehensive legal strategy designed to maximize your compensation:
- Free initial consultation and case evaluation: We meet with you to discuss the accident circumstances, review available documentation, assess liability, and explain your legal options without any cost or obligation. This consultation helps us determine claim viability and gives you a clear understanding of what to expect.
- Thorough investigation and evidence collection: Our team obtains accident reports, interviews witnesses, photographs the scene if possible, reviews surveillance footage, collects medical records, and consults with experts to build the strongest possible case. We leave no stone unturned in documenting both liability and damages.
- Demand letter and settlement negotiations: We compile all evidence into a comprehensive demand package that documents your injuries, proves defendant negligence, calculates your losses, and presents a compelling settlement demand. Most cases resolve during this negotiation phase without requiring litigation.
- Filing a lawsuit if a settlement isn’t achieved: When insurance companies refuse fair settlements, we file a formal complaint in Connecticut Superior Court within the statute of limitations, serving defendants with notice of your claims. Litigation demonstrates our commitment to securing full compensation regardless of how long it takes.
- Discovery process and depositions: Both sides exchange evidence through interrogatories, document requests, and depositions, where parties and witnesses provide sworn testimony. This process often reveals additional evidence that strengthens your position and motivates settlement.
- Mediation and alternative dispute resolution: Many Connecticut courts require mediation where a neutral third party facilitates settlement discussions—we prepare extensively for these sessions and negotiate aggressively to resolve cases without trial expense. Mediation succeeds in approximately 70% of cases.
- Trial preparation and courtroom representation: If settlement remains elusive, we prepare your case for jury trial by organizing exhibits, preparing witnesses, crafting opening and closing arguments, and developing trial strategy. Paul Ganim’s extensive courtroom experience ensures skilled representation throughout the proceedings.
- Post-verdict motions and appeals if necessary: We protect favorable verdicts by responding to post-trial motions and, if needed, handling appeals to preserve your recovery. Our commitment extends beyond the verdict to ensure you actually receive the compensation awarded.
Let us guide you through every stage of your case—call 203-884-7075 for your free consultation.
Ganim Legal, P.C.: Your Broken Bone Lawyer in Bridgeport, CT
Attorney Paul Ganim has served Bridgeport’s injured residents since his admission to the Connecticut Bar in 1992, bringing decades of courtroom experience and a proven track record of results.
His recognition as one of Connecticut’s Top 100 Civil Plaintiffs by the National Trial Lawyers Association, Top 10 Personal Injury Attorneys, and winner of multiple Connecticut Law Tribune awards reflects his commitment to maximizing client compensation.
As Bridgeport’s elected Probate Judge, Paul brings unique insight into legal proceedings while maintaining an active personal injury practice through our firm. His courtroom experience—handling thousands of cases before Connecticut’s Superior, Appellate, and Supreme Courts, plus federal courts—provides strategic advantages that benefit every client. We work on a contingency basis with free consultations, ensuring that serious injuries don’t create financial barriers to quality legal representation.
Our firm’s connection to Bridgeport runs deep through decades of community involvement and client service. We understand the challenges local families face after accidents disrupt their lives, and we fight to restore the financial security you deserve while you heal.
General Information on Broken Bones in Bridgeport
Bridgeport’s injury statistics reveal concerning trends that affect local residents’ safety and health. The Connecticut Crash Data Repository operated by UConn documents 19,730 total vehicle crashes in Bridgeport between April 2020 and October 2023, including 8,941 intersection collisions and 405 pedestrian accidents—many resulting in fracture injuries.
According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Connecticut recorded 35,700 nonfatal workplace injuries in private industry during 2022, with a total recordable case rate of 3.2 per 100 workers—substantially exceeding the national average of 2.7.
Common Bones Fractured in Injury Cases
Different accident types produce predictable fracture patterns that our experience handling hundreds of cases has helped us recognize:
- Arm and wrist fractures: Distal radius fractures commonly occur when victims extend their hands to break falls, often seen in slip and fall accidents on icy sidewalks or wet floors. These injuries frequently require casting for 6-8 weeks and may need surgical pinning if displacement is severe.
- Collarbone (clavicle) fractures: Motorcycle accidents, bicycle collisions, and shoulder-first falls typically cause clavicle fractures that heal with figure-eight bracing or surgical plate fixation. Athletes and cyclists represent the most common victims of these injuries.
- Facial fractures: High-impact collisions, assaults, and unrestrained vehicle occupants frequently sustain orbital, nasal, or jaw fractures requiring specialized reconstructive surgery. These injuries often involve both functional and cosmetic concerns that increase settlement values.
- Hip fractures: Elderly pedestrians struck by vehicles or nursing home residents who fall due to inadequate supervision commonly suffer hip fractures requiring immediate surgical repair and extended rehabilitation. These injuries carry high complication rates, including infection and reduced mobility.
- Leg and ankle fractures: Tibia, fibula, and ankle fractures result from vehicle collisions, falls from heights, and workplace accidents involving heavy equipment. Complex ankle fractures may require multiple surgeries and frequently result in post-traumatic arthritis.
- Rib fractures: Side-impact vehicle collisions, falls onto hard surfaces, and crushing incidents cause rib fractures that, while painful, typically heal without surgery unless internal organ damage occurs. Multiple rib fractures increase pneumonia risk and require hospitalization.
When Broken Bones Require Surgery
Not all fractures need surgical intervention, but specific circumstances make surgery medically necessary and substantially increase claim values:
- Displaced fragments requiring realignment: When bone ends separate significantly, surgeons must perform open reduction and internal fixation (ORIF) using plates, screws, or rods to restore proper positioning. Weight-bearing bones like the femur, tibia, and ankle almost always require surgery when displaced.
- Hardware implantation for stability: Complex fractures need metal plates, intramedullary rods, or external fixation devices to maintain alignment during healing—these procedures involve general anesthesia, surgical incisions, infection risk, and potential hardware removal surgeries later.
- Non-union or delayed healing complications: When fractures fail to heal within expected timeframes, revision surgery may become necessary to stimulate bone growth through bone grafting or electrical stimulation. These complications extend recovery significantly and justify additional compensation.
- Post-surgical therapy and extended recovery: Surgical fracture repair typically requires 3-6 months of protected weight-bearing, physical therapy, and gradual return to activities—far longer than casting alone. Lost wages during this extended period must be calculated into your damages.
Common Causes of Broken Bone Injuries
Understanding how fractures occur helps identify liability and build stronger cases:
- Defective product failures: Ladder collapses, scaffold failures, and equipment malfunctions cause fractures when manufacturers release products with design flaws or inadequate warnings. Product liability claims allow recovery from manufacturers regardless of user error.
- Falls from heights or level surfaces: Uneven sidewalks, icy parking lots, poorly lit stairwells, and missing handrails cause falls that fracture wrists, hips, and ankles when property owners neglect maintenance. Premises liability law holds owners accountable for hazardous conditions.
- Pedestrian accidents: Distracted drivers striking pedestrians in crosswalks cause severe fractures, including pelvis, leg, and skull fractures, requiring immediate hospitalization. Connecticut’s crosswalk laws create strong liability against drivers who fail to yield.
- Sports and recreational injuries: While assumption of risk limits liability for injuries inherent to sports, defective equipment, inadequate supervision, or reckless conduct by other participants still creates viable claims. Youth sports organizations owe heightened duties of care.
- Vehicle collisions: Head-on impacts, T-bone crashes, and rollover accidents produce fractures when collision forces exceed what seatbelts and airbags can absorb. Multiple vehicle occupants may sustain fractures in serious wrecks.
- Workplace accidents: Construction falls, forklift incidents, caught-between accidents, and struck-by injuries cause fractures that may qualify for both workers’ compensation benefits and third-party liability claims. OSHA violations strengthen third-party cases.
Broken Bone Recovery Timelines
Understanding typical healing periods helps set realistic expectations while identifying cases where complications justify higher compensation:
| Fracture Type | Typical Healing Time | Common Treatment |
|---|---|---|
| Simple (non-displaced) fracture | 6–8 weeks | Casting or splinting, limited activity |
| Displaced fracture | 8–12 weeks | ORIF surgery or closed reduction with casting |
| Compound (open) fracture | 12+ weeks | Emergency surgery, IV antibiotics, wound care, extended monitoring |
| Multiple fractures | 3–6 months+ | Multiple surgeries, extended hospitalization, intensive rehabilitation |
Our experience handling fracture cases reveals that published timelines represent best-case scenarios—many clients experience delayed healing due to age, diabetes, smoking, poor circulation, or infection. These complications don’t indicate patient fault but rather reflect injury severity that warrants higher compensation.
Re-fracture risk remains elevated for 6-12 months after initial healing, particularly for weight-bearing bones that patients return to using too quickly. Post-healing limitations, including chronic pain, reduced strength, weather sensitivity, and limited range of motion, frequently persist indefinitely, creating permanent partial disability claims.
Symptoms & Diagnosis of Bone Fractures
Recognizing fracture symptoms ensures a timely diagnosis, which strengthens your legal claim by documenting injuries immediately after accidents. Immediate physical signs include intense pain at the injury site, visible deformity or abnormal positioning, inability to bear weight or use the affected limb, swelling and bruising that develops rapidly, grinding sensations during movement, and loss of function in the injured area.
Diagnostic testing typically begins with standard X-rays that reveal most fractures clearly, though hairline fractures may require CT scans for detailed bone imaging or MRI when soft tissue damage is suspected.
Establishments such as Bridgeport Hospital provide comprehensive orthopedic imaging 24/7 through their emergency department, ensuring timely diagnosis regardless of when accidents occur.
⚠️ Early imaging matters enormously for legal claims because it creates contemporaneous medical documentation proving injury severity before insurance companies can argue pre-existing conditions or delayed treatment. Waiting days or weeks to seek care allows insurers to question whether the accident actually caused your fracture—immediate diagnosis eliminates this defense strategy.
Complications and Long-Term Effects
Not all fractures heal properly, and these complications significantly increase both your recovery time and your claim’s value:
- Compartment syndrome requiring emergency intervention: When swelling inside muscle compartments restricts blood flow to damaged tissue, emergency fasciotomy surgery becomes necessary to prevent tissue death and limb loss. This complication occurs most commonly with tibia and forearm fractures, requiring immediate recognition and treatment.
- Infection risks in compound fractures: Open fractures where bone penetrates skin create pathways for bacteria to cause osteomyelitis (bone infection) that may require weeks of IV antibiotics, surgical debridement, and extended hospitalization. Infection substantially extends recovery and increases permanent damage risk.
- Malunion creating permanent deformity: When fractures heal in improper positions, the resulting malunion causes visible deformity, chronic pain, altered biomechanics, and arthritis development—often requiring corrective osteotomy surgery to re-break and realign bones. These complications justify substantial additional compensation.
- Post-traumatic arthritis development: Fractures involving joint surfaces damage cartilage and create irregular joint surfaces that wear abnormally, causing arthritis within 2-5 years of injury. This complication frequently necessitates eventual joint replacement surgery and creates large future medical expense claims.
Speak to a Bridgeport Broken Bone Attorney Today!
Don’t let insurance companies minimize your serious fracture injury or pressure you into settlements that won’t cover your actual losses. Connecticut’s two-year statute of limitations and shorter government claim deadlines mean delay can permanently eliminate your right to compensation—contact us now while evidence is fresh and your legal options remain fully protected.
Call 203-884-7075 or visit our contact page for your free consultation—Go With Who You Know, Call Park Avenue Paul.
FAQs
Can I file a claim if my broken bone has already healed?
Yes—Connecticut law allows compensation for all damages you suffered during healing, including past medical bills, lost wages during immobilization, pain and suffering throughout recovery, and permanent limitations like reduced strength or chronic discomfort that persist after bone union. Many successful claims involve fractures that healed months before filing.
What if I returned to work before my broken bone case settled?
Returning to work doesn’t eliminate your claim but may affect lost wage calculations if you resume full duties without restrictions. However, you can still recover for wages lost during initial recovery, reduced earning capacity if you took lower-paying work, and non-economic damages for pain and suffering, regardless of employment status.
Do I need surgery to have a valid broken bone case?
No—many non-surgical fractures treated with casting justify substantial settlements when they caused significant pain, extended immobilization, lost income, and ongoing limitations. While surgery typically increases claim value due to higher costs and greater trauma, conservatively treated fractures remain fully compensable under Connecticut law.
How does a prior fracture in the same area affect my new claim?
Defendants remain liable for aggravating pre-existing conditions, meaning they must compensate you for making an old injury worse, even if the bone was previously fractured. Medical evidence comparing your pre-accident condition to post-accident limitations establishes the incremental harm for which they’re responsible—prior injuries don’t bar recovery.
How long do broken bone claims typically take to resolve?
Most cases settle within 12-18 months through negotiation, though complex cases requiring surgery, extended treatment, or disputed liability may take 2-3 years to reach resolution. Trial adds additional time but remains necessary when insurers refuse fair settlements—we work efficiently while ensuring you receive full compensation rather than rushing inadequate settlements.





