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The Shoulder
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steady-mole-062

Got sideswiped merging back into my lane — am I even at fault here? Back is wrecked

This happened a few weeks ago and I'm still trying to make sense of all of it, so bear with me.

I was on the highway during pretty heavy traffic. A piece of debris in the road forced me to drift toward the shoulder to avoid it — then when I corrected back into my lane, another car came out of nowhere and caught my rear quarter panel. The impact spun me around pretty good.

I drove myself to urgent care that same night because my lower and mid-back were screaming. They did some imaging, said nothing was "broken" and sent me home with muscle relaxers. But here's the thing — it's been almost three weeks and the pain hasn't gone away. It actually feels worse some mornings. I've got a follow-up with my regular doctor scheduled but I'm nervous about what they'll find.

Meanwhile, the other driver's insurance is already calling me. Like, repeatedly. They've been really friendly and "just want to get this taken care of quickly for me." That honestly makes me more nervous, not less.

I have no idea where I stand on fault. I didn't choose to drift — I was avoiding something in the road. Does that even matter legally? And I have zero clue what a back injury from something like this is even worth in terms of a claim. I'm not trying to be greedy, I just can't afford to be out of work and drowning in medical bills.

Has anyone dealt with something similar? How did you handle the insurance calls while you were still injured and figuring things out?

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9 replies

  • 9
    clever-newt-456

    That "friendly and just want to help you" energy from the other driver's insurance? That's a massive red flag. They're calling you that fast because they want a recorded statement and a quick lowball settlement before you even know the full extent of your injuries. Do not give them a recorded statement. Do not accept anything. Just say you're still treating and will be in touch.

  • 12
    sharp-bison-246

    I used to work claims for a major carrier and I'll be honest with you — when we called injury claimants fast and acted super warm, it was a strategy. We were trained to build rapport quickly and get you on record saying things like "I'm doing okay" or "it's not that bad" before you fully knew what was wrong. Those statements can and do get used against you later. You don't owe them a conversation right now.

  • 12
    daring-stoat-761

    Almost the exact same thing happened to me — swerved to miss something, got clipped coming back over. The fault question stressed me out so much but my attorney explained that avoiding a road hazard is considered a reasonable action and the person who hit me while I was correcting still bore most of the liability. Every state is different though so definitely get someone to actually look at your situation.

    • 5
      warm-lynx-160

      I'm so sorry you're going through this while you're still in pain — that's so much to deal with at once. Please take care of yourself first and don't let the insurance pressure make you rush into anything. You deserve the time to actually heal and understand what happened before signing or agreeing to anything.

  • 3
    humble-owl-344

    Please don't brush off the worsening back pain. "Nothing broken" at urgent care just means no obvious fracture on initial imaging — it does not rule out soft tissue damage, disc issues, or ligament injuries that can take weeks to fully show up on imaging or even just symptom-wise. Keep every appointment, document your pain levels daily, and be really specific with your doctor about what's getting worse. That documentation matters.

  • 15
    patient-dove-865

    From a process standpoint, a few things worth knowing: (1) you're generally not required to speak with the other party's insurance at all — your own insurer handles communication in most cases; (2) the value of an injury claim is heavily tied to your documented medical treatment, so gaps in care hurt you; (3) fault in a lane-correction scenario involving a road hazard is a real legal question that varies by state. Most personal injury consultations are free — worth at least one call before you make any decisions.

    • 5
      gentle-kestrel-693

      Stop answering those calls. Seriously, just stop. You can let them go to voicemail and nothing bad happens to you. Get through your doctor's appointment, find out what's actually going on with your back, and then figure out your next move. You're making decisions with incomplete information right now and that's exactly where they want you.

    • 5
      patient-mole-388

      Not legal advice, but the debris-avoidance scenario you're describing is actually a nuanced fault question — courts and adjusters look at whether your reaction was reasonable given the circumstances, and what the other driver's responsibility was to maintain a safe following distance and react to traffic ahead of them. The fact that you had a reason to drift matters. Worth talking to someone who can actually review the police report and any available footage before you form an opinion on fault yourself.

  • 15
    bold-wren-316

    Was there a police report filed? Any dashcam footage — yours or anyone else's? What did the debris actually look like — did anyone else swerve for it? I'm not doubting you at all, I just think those details are going to be really important when fault gets determined, and it's worth thinking through what evidence exists before anything else.