Whiplash Woes: Proving Your Injury in a Low-Impact Collision
October 6, 2025Whiplash is one of the most common and frustrating New Haven auto accident injuries. It results from the rapid back-and-forth motion of the neckāa trauma that can occur even in a slow-speed, low-impact crash. The frustrating part? Insurance adjusters often dismiss it as minor or exaggerated because thereās no visible cut or break.
Hereās how you can legally and medically substantiate your whiplash claim.
The Medical Foundation: Documenting the Pain
Whiplash (a non-medical term for soft tissue injury, usually a sprain or strain of the neck) must be medically confirmed.
- Immediate Medical Visit: As mentioned above, see a doctor, urgent care facility, or emergency room immediately. A key mistake people make is waiting for the pain to get “bad enough.” The gap between the crash and your first medical visit will be used against you.
- Detailed Symptom Diary: Keep a meticulous journal. Document your pain level (on a 1-10 scale), specific symptoms (headaches, stiffness, blurred vision, dizziness), and how the injury affects your daily life (canāt lift groceries, missed work, difficulty sleeping).
- Follow Doctor’s Orders: Do not skip physical therapy, specialist visits, or prescribed treatments. Gaps in treatment suggest the injury isn’t serious. Consistency is key to demonstrating the severity and ongoing nature of the injury.
The Legal Evidence: Connecting the Crash to the Injury
Proving a soft tissue injury like whiplash requires showing a direct link between the forces of the low-impact collision and your symptoms.
- Expert Testimony: Your doctor’s testimony is your best weapon. They can use diagnostic tools like MRIs (which may show ligament damage) and CT scans (to rule out fractures) to back up their clinical findings.
- Accident Reconstruction: In cases where the insurer aggressively denies the claim, accident reconstruction experts can demonstrate that even a low-speed impact generates enough kinetic force to cause soft tissue damage to the occupants.
- Prior Medical History: Be prepared. The insurer will look for any history of neck or back pain. Your medical records must clearly demonstrate that your current symptoms are new or a significant aggravation of a pre-existing condition caused directly by the crash.
