The Shoulder
The Shoulder
71
Car accidentssilent-wolf-674

Got rear-ended while STILL in PT from my last accident — can this actually get worse??

I don't even know where to start. I feel like the universe is personally out to get me right now.

About four months ago a pickup blew through a parking lot exit and sideswiped me hard enough to deploy my airbags. Totally not my fault — there was a witness and everything. I've been grinding through physical therapy ever since, mostly working on my neck and shoulder. It's been slow but I was finally starting to feel like maybe I'd get back to normal.

Then last Tuesday I'm sitting at a red light, completely stopped, and I get slammed from behind by an SUV. Driver said she "didn't see the light change." My body went into immediate panic mode — all the soreness I'd been working through came flooding back times ten.

Now I'm sitting here with:

  • An open claim from accident #1 that isn't settled yet
  • A brand new claim from accident #2
  • A PT schedule that just got a lot more complicated
  • Two different insurance companies I'm apparently now dealing with

I'm genuinely scared about how the first claim handles the fact that I got hurt again. Like, does the new injury somehow cancel out or complicate what they owe me from before? And will the second driver's insurance try to blame my injuries on the first accident?

I haven't hired a lawyer for either one yet. Honestly I didn't think I needed one for the first, but now I'm starting to feel really out of my depth.

Has anyone dealt with overlapping accidents and open claims at the same time? What did you do?

12replies

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12 replies

  • 19
    kind-seal-006

    One practical thing: make sure both claims have a clear paper trail showing the date of loss for each accident is separate and distinct. You'd be surprised how documentation gets muddled when files sit at the same insurer or even just get handled by the same adjuster. Also, your PT notes should ideally reflect something like "patient presents with new acute symptoms following second MVA on [date]" — that kind of language matters a lot when claims go to review. If your provider hasn't charted it that explicitly, it's okay to ask them to make sure the record is accurate and complete.

  • 14
    steady-grouse-918

    From a medical standpoint, please tell your PT and your doctor about the new accident immediately if you haven't already. They need to document your baseline before the second injury muddies the picture. And honestly — be honest with them about every symptom even if it seems minor. Whiplash re-injury on top of an existing soft tissue injury can take way longer to heal. Don't push through pain trying to seem fine. Your body just went through a lot.

    • 8
      careful-commuter849

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?

  • 12
    spry-seal-548

    Quick question — did you go to the ER or urgent care after the second accident, or did you just go home? I only ask because if there's a gap between the crash and when you sought treatment, both insurers will absolutely use that against you. Even if you felt "okay-ish" in the moment, adrenaline masks a lot. Hoping you got checked out.

  • 10
    steady-crane-652

    The moment those adjusters find out about accident #1, they will absolutely try to use it against you. Insurance companies love the phrase "pre-existing condition" — it's basically their favorite way to lowball people. Don't give any recorded statements without really thinking it through first. They will ask leading questions designed to make your injuries sound like they were already there.

    • 6
      steady-survivor164

      Solid advice. Getting it in writing is the part most people skip.

  • 8
    warm-badger-970

    Oh no, I'm so sorry. I had two accidents in the same year a few years back and the overlapping claims were a nightmare. Both insurers kept trying to point at each other and say the injuries were "pre-existing" from whichever accident served their argument better. It felt like a shell game. Please document everything — every PT visit, every symptom change, every conversation with any adjuster. You'll thank yourself later.

    • 19
      warm-marten-092

      I used to work on the claims side and I want to be straight with you: two open claims with overlapping injuries is genuinely complex, not just for you but from an internal handling standpoint too. What happens is each insurer will try to apportion liability for your injuries to the other accident. They have medical reviewers who specifically look for ways to do this. Your PT records are going to become a key battleground — they'll scrutinize every note to see if your current symptoms were already documented before the second crash. Get copies of all your records now so you know what's in them.

    • 23
      curious-fox-159

      Not legal advice, but situations with sequential accidents and ongoing treatment are exactly when having representation tends to make the biggest difference. The legal concept of "aggravation of a pre-existing injury" actually protects you in most states — a driver who hits you is responsible for making your condition worse, even if you were already hurt. The challenge is proving what changed and when. A PI attorney can help structure both claims so they don't cannibalize each other. Most offer free consultations so it's worth at least one conversation.

  • 8
    steady-marten-859

    This sounds genuinely exhausting and I'm really sorry you're going through it. You were already dealing with so much and now this. Please don't try to navigate all of this alone — it's too complicated and too important. You deserve to have someone in your corner.

  • 8
    wise-dove-250

    I know this feels overwhelming but honestly — the fact that you have a documented ongoing treatment history from accident #1 could actually work in your favor. There's a clear medical record showing you were already injured and actively treating. That timeline is hard for insurers to dispute. You're not starting from scratch proving you were hurt. Hang in there.

  • 5
    cool-grouse-050

    Get a lawyer. I know it feels like a big step but you're already in over your head through no fault of your own, and two claims with overlapping injuries is not a DIY situation. Most PI attorneys work on contingency so there's no upfront cost. Stop talking to both insurers until you at least have a consultation.