The Shoulder
The Shoulder
58
plain-raven-270

Attorneys keep bringing up my treatment gap — but I literally couldn't afford to go back

So I was rear-ended pretty badly at a red light about two years ago. The other driver was 100% at fault — there were witnesses, a police report, the whole thing. Liability isn't the question here.

I went to the ER the night it happened, got checked out, was told to follow up with a specialist. Here's the problem: my insurance situation was a mess at the time. I'd just lost my job a few weeks before the crash, COBRA was way too expensive, and I genuinely could not afford to keep going to appointments. I tried one follow-up visit and the out-of-pocket cost was just... not something I could swing while also trying to keep my lights on.

Fast forward to now — my neck and lower back are honestly worse than they were right after the accident. The pain never went away, I just learned to live with it because I had no choice.

I've talked to a few personal injury attorneys and they all keep flagging the gap in my treatment as a "significant weakness." I get it, I do. But it feels so unfair that I'm being penalized for being uninsured and broke through no fault of my own.

Has anyone dealt with something like this? Is there a way to explain the gap that actually holds up? Did you find doctors willing to document that the delay was financially motivated, not because you were healed?

I'm not trying to milk anything — I'm genuinely still hurting and just want some accountability from the guy who hit me. Feeling pretty defeated right now.

10replies

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10 replies

  • 8
    hearty-marten-198

    I went through almost the exact same thing. Lost coverage right around when my accident happened and had a huge gap in care. What helped me was finding a doctor who does medical liens — basically they treat you now and get paid out of any settlement later. It let me finally get proper documentation of my ongoing pain. Some attorneys actually have relationships with these providers. Worth asking around.

  • 9
    clear-owl-453

    Adjusters LOVE a treatment gap. They will absolutely use it to argue you must not have been that hurt if you stopped going to the doctor. Don't let them gaslight you — they know full well that millions of people can't afford care. The gap hurts optics, but it's not a death sentence for your claim. Just get back into treatment NOW if you haven't, and document everything going forward.

    • 11
      daring-swift-957

      Honestly, I used to be on the other side of these claims. A gap with a clear financial explanation was always treated differently internally than a gap where someone just... disappeared. If your attorney can frame the narrative clearly — job loss, no insurance, COBRA unaffordable — and you have any evidence of that timeline, a reasonable adjuster will factor that in. The ones who won't are just negotiating. Keep pushing.

  • 13
    genuine-dove-942

    Not legal advice, but this comes up more than people realize. A financial gap in treatment is generally more defensible than a gap with no explanation at all. The key is building a paper trail — anything showing you looked into costs, were denied coverage, couldn't afford COBRA, etc. Even old emails or texts where you talked about not being able to pay for appointments can help establish the reason. The attorneys you've spoken to aren't wrong that it's a weakness, but it's a manageable one with the right documentation strategy.

    • 16
      genuine-fox-839

      From a medical standpoint, untreated soft tissue injuries absolutely can worsen over time — scar tissue, compensation patterns, muscle imbalances. If you can get a doctor to document the current condition and connect it back to the original trauma, that continuity matters. Ask whoever you see now to note in their records that the delayed care was financially driven and that the symptoms are consistent with the original mechanism of injury.

  • 14
    spry-lynx-049

    One thing that can really help bridge a gap like yours is gathering any kind of contemporaneous evidence that you were still suffering during that period — think texts to friends or family complaining about pain, any over-the-counter pharmacy receipts for pain meds, even social media posts (or notably, things you stopped doing). It's not perfect but it helps paint the picture that you didn't just feel better and then decide to sue later.

    • 5
      steady-traveler911

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 18
    calm-swift-899

    Stop waiting and get back into treatment immediately if you haven't already. Every day you're not seeing a doctor is another day the gap gets harder to explain. Find a lien-based doctor or a community health clinic, whatever it takes. The claim gets easier to make the shorter that gap is from today forward.

    • 5
      level-road-soul996

      Adding this: keep copies of every email. It mattered for me.

  • 18
    keen-newt-938

    I'm so sorry you're dealing with this on top of everything else. It's genuinely unfair that the system punishes people for not being able to afford care after someone else hurt them. Please don't give up — it sounds like you have a real case and a real story. Keep advocating for yourself.