Thursday, July 16, 2026

Should You See a Physical Therapist After a Car Accident?

HomeShould You See a Physical Therapist After a Car Accident?

Should You See a Physical Therapist After a Car Accident?

July 16, 2026Michelle Lysengen
A physical therapist manually treating a patient's shoulder in a clinical setting, representing physical therapy rehabilitation for injuries sustained in a car accident

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    Every 4 minutes.

    On average, every 4 minutes someone picks up the phone and calls us for help. That kind of trust says everything.

    Physical therapy is the treatment most crash injuries actually need, and it’s more accessible than most people realize. If you’ve got lingering neck, back, or soft-tissue pain after a collision, a physical therapist is often the right person to see. Two questions usually get in the way: do you need a doctor’s referral first, and how is this different from going to a chiropractor? Both have straightforward answers.

    Key Takeaways

    • You no longer need a physician referral to see a physical therapist. Every US state allows some form of direct access as of 2025.
    • Physical therapy is active and exercise-based. That’s the main thing separating it from chiropractic care, which centers on spinal adjustment.
    • Starting sooner is linked to less imaging, fewer injections, and lower odds of ending up on opioids, though the strongest data comes from back pain.
    • Mild strains often heal on their own. PT earns its place when symptoms are limiting you or aren’t improving.

    Do you need a referral to see a physical therapist?

    No, at least not to get in the door. As of 2025, all fifty states allow direct access to a physical therapist, meaning you can book an evaluation and start treatment without a doctor sending you first.

    Two caveats keep this from being as simple as it sounds. A lot of states allow only “provisional” direct access, with limits like a cap on visits or a time window before you need a physician’s sign-off. And access and payment are different things. Your insurance might still require a referral to cover the visits, and Medicare keeps a physician involved in the plan of care even though it technically allows direct access. So you can usually start on your own. Whether your plan pays without a referral is worth a phone call first.

    What does physical therapy after a car accident involve?

    It starts with an assessment. The therapist works out what’s injured, what moves, what hurts, and what you need to get back to. Then comes the actual work, which is more varied than most people picture. A typical program pulls from a few buckets, and each one does a different job.

    Stretching and range-of-motion. After an injury, muscles guard, and joints stiffen, and that stiffness turns into its own source of pain. Gentle stretching and mobility work give back the movement you lost. This is usually where things start, because you can’t strengthen a joint you can’t move.

    Strengthening. Injured and guarded muscles get weak fast, and weak muscles leave the hurt area unprotected. Targeted strengthening rebuilds them so your neck or back isn’t leaning on the wrong muscles to get through the day.

    Core and stabilization work. This is the part people underrate. The deep muscles around your spine and trunk work like a built-in brace. When they’re doing their job, the injured neck or back isn’t carrying the whole load, and you’re much less likely to slide into the chronic, comes-and-goes pain that outlasts the original injury. Stabilization training wakes those muscles back up and teaches them to fire at the right moment.

    Manual therapy. Hands-on mobilization of stiff joints and tight tissue, usually used alongside the exercises to make movement easier and less guarded.

    Education and a home program. The therapist explains what’s happening and why moving helps, then gives you exercises to do on your own. The clinic sessions only work if you keep at them between visits.

    The whole model is active. You’re not lying on a table receiving treatment so much as being coached back to function.

    Physical therapist or chiropractor?

    Both are licensed, doctoral-trained professions, and both treat musculoskeletal pain, so the overlap is real. The difference is emphasis. Chiropractic care centers on spinal manipulation and alignment. Physical therapy centers on movement, exercise, and functional recovery, though plenty of physical therapists also do hands-on manual work.

    Neither is automatically better. They’re different tools. For most soft-tissue crash injuries, where the evidence points toward staying active and rebuilding strength, PT’s exercise-first approach lines up well with what helps. If you’re deciding between the two, the chiropractor question is worth its own look.

    Does starting physical therapy sooner help?

    Probably yes, with a caveat about where the evidence comes from. Patients who start PT early for recent-onset low back pain tend to use less downstream care, and early PT is linked to a lower chance of long-term opioid use across several common pain types. For neck pain specifically, people who delayed physical therapy were far more likely to end up getting spinal injections and opioid prescriptions than those who started early.

    The catch: much of the strongest cost-and-outcome data is from back pain, not whiplash specifically, so treat “earlier is better” as a well-supported lean rather than an ironclad rule. And plenty of minor strains get better without any formal therapy at all. PT is worth it when your symptoms are actually limiting you, when they aren’t improving on the expected timeline, or when you’ve got the risk factors for a longer recovery.

    How long and how much?

    For a typical soft-tissue injury, a course of PT often runs a couple of sessions a week for six to eight weeks, adjusted to how you respond. Costs vary widely and depend heavily on insurance. Out of pocket, sessions commonly land somewhere in the range of $75 to $150, with the first evaluation higher, though those are rough market figures rather than fixed prices. With coverage, a per-visit copay is more typical. Ask about the total expected course up front so the number doesn’t surprise you halfway through.

    If you’re making an injury claim, the paper trail from consistent treatment matters too. What your medical records actually say about your injury and your progress can carry more weight than the number of visits, which is one more reason to follow the plan and keep the documentation clean.

    This article is general information, not medical or legal advice. For care, see a licensed medical professional.

    If a car accident in California left you with an injury that needs ongoing treatment, and you’re trying to understand how that fits with a claim, DK Law can help you understand your options. Contact us for a free consultation.

    About the Author

    Michelle Lysengen

    Michelle is a content specialist at DK Law and creates content that highlights company events and breaks down complex legal topics into digestible, engaging content. She earned her B.A. in Marketing from California State University, Fullerton.

    DK All the way

    From Your Case to Compensation, we take your case all the way.

    Schedule a Free Consultation

    Get Expert Legal Advice at Zero Cost.

    At DK Law we’re with you – all the way.

    Get a Free Consultation with our experts today!

    ER or Urgent Care After a Car Accident: Where Should You Go?

    HomeER or Urgent Care After a Car Accident: Where Should You Go?

    ER or Urgent Care After a Car Accident: Where Should You Go?

    July 15, 2026Elvis Goren
    A hospital emergency room entrance illuminated at night with ambulance lights reflecting off a wet pavement, representing the decision to seek emergency medical care after a car accident

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      Every 4 minutes.

      On average, every 4 minutes someone picks up the phone and calls us for help. That kind of trust says everything.

      After a car crash, the ER-versus-urgent-care call comes down to three things: how bad your symptoms are, whether you might have an injury you can’t see or feel yet, and what kind of imaging it would take to rule that out. Get those straight, and the choice is usually obvious.

      The short version: the ER is for anything that could be serious, because it can scan for internal, head, and spinal injuries. Urgent care is for clearly minor injuries, because it can look you over and take an X-ray but usually can’t do much more than that. Cost and wait times matter, but they come second. The injuries that turn dangerous after a crash are often the ones you can’t see, and sometimes can’t even feel for the first few hours.

      Key Takeaways

      • The real difference is capability, not cost. Urgent care treats minor injuries and takes X-rays. It usually can’t run the CT or MRI scans that rule out serious trauma.
      • Go to the ER for red flags: a head injury, trouble breathing, chest or abdominal pain, numbness or weakness, or any high-speed crash.
      • Urgent care is reasonable when you’re stable, and the injuries are clearly minor, like a sprain, a small cut, or mild neck stiffness.
      • Do not avoid the ER over cost concerns. Insurers are legally required to judge an emergency by your symptoms at the time of the visit, not the final diagnosis.

      Should you go to the ER or urgent care after a car accident?

      Short answer: if anything about the crash or how you feel could be serious, go to the ER. If you’re stable and banged up in only minor ways, urgent care will do. The table sorts the situations people run into most.

      Your situationWhere to goWhy
      Hit your head, blacked out, confused, or a headache that’s worseningER or 911Only the ER can scan for bleeding or a brain injury
      Chest pain or trouble breathingER or 911Possible internal or cardiac injury
      Severe or spreading abdominal painER or 911Internal bleeding can surface hours later
      Numbness, tingling, or weakness anywhereERPossible spinal or nerve injury
      High-speed crash, rollover, or airbags deployedERHigh-energy crashes hide serious injury
      Minor cut, sprain, or sore muscles, and you feel stableUrgent careThey can evaluate, clean wounds, and take X-rays
      Mild neck stiffness, no red flagsUrgent careFine for a first look and a record of symptoms
      Not sure, but something feels offERWhen in doubt, get the scan only the ER can run

      What can urgent care actually handle?

      Quite a bit, for minor injuries. A typical urgent care can clean and close a small cut, wrap a sprain, check a possible simple fracture, and take a first look at neck or back pain. Almost all of them have an X-ray machine on site, which is why they can rule a broken wrist in or out while you wait.

      What they mostly can’t do is see inside your skull, chest, or abdomen. On-site advanced imaging is rare: in a national survey of urgent care centers, only about one in seven had a CT scanner, and MRI was basically nonexistent. Plenty of individual centers spell it out, like the University of Maryland system, whose urgent care does not perform MRIs or CT scans. 

      When an urgent care finds something past its depth, it sends you on. Patients referred from urgent care to the ER are more likely to need a CT scan and to be admitted, which tells you the referral usually means something real got caught.

      So urgent care is a treat-the-minor-stuff, take-an-X-ray, refer-when-needed kind of place. Useful. Just not built to rule out the injuries that make crashes dangerous.

      Go to the emergency room, or call 911, if any of these are true:

      • You hit your head or lost consciousness
      • You’re confused or your headache is getting worse
      • You have chest pain or trouble breathing, your belly hurts or is swelling, you feel numbness or tingling or weakness anywhere, or the crash itself was violent (high speed, a rollover, airbags going off).

      The ER exists for exactly this. It has a trauma team, on-call specialists, and CT and MRI scanners running around the clock. It can catch internal bleeding, a fractured spine, or a brain injury while there’s still time to do something about it. Crash adrenaline is good at hiding those injuries for a while, so feeling okay in the first hour is not proof that you are.

      How much does each one cost?

      For whiplash specifically, what the research shows and what the ads promise don’t line up.

      The bills are genuinely different. Federal data puts the average ER visit that ends with you going home around $750, and that’s the cheaper end. Looking at what actually gets billed, one large insurer pegs the median ER visit near $1,700 against about $165 for urgent care.

      That gap is real, and it’s why the cost instinct exists. But there’s a protection built into the law for the exact situation a crash creates. Under the prudent layperson standard, your insurer has to cover an emergency visit based on the symptoms that sent you in, not on what the doctors eventually find. If your chest hurt and you reasonably thought it was serious, they can’t deny the claim later just because it turned out to be a pulled muscle. Fear of the bill is not a good reason to skip the ER when you have red-flag symptoms. If the longer-term worry is how all of this gets paid for, that plays out later in your claim, where medical liens can take a real bite out of a settlement if they aren’t handled well.

      What about wait times?

      Urgent care is usually faster for minor problems. The ER runs on triage, which means the sickest person goes first, not the person who checked in first. National data has put the median wait to see an ER provider under half an hour, but a stable, painful-but-not-dangerous injury can sit a lot longer than that while worse cases jump the line. If your injury is truly minor, urgent care respects your afternoon. If it might be serious, a long wait in the right place beats a short wait in the wrong one.

      What to do when you’re not sure

      Most people after a crash land in the gray zone: shaken up, sore, not obviously broken, not obviously fine. When you can’t tell, treat it as the more serious case and go to the ER, because only the ER has the scans to settle it. And even if you skip formal care that day because you feel alright, get evaluated by a doctor within a day or two anyway. Some injuries, whiplash and concussions among them, take time to show themselves, and an early record of your symptoms protects both your health and any claim you might make later.

      Once you’re past the emergency and a doctor has cleared you of anything serious, lingering soft-tissue pain is a different question. That’s the point where treatment like physical therapy or, for some people, seeing a chiropractor comes into the picture, well after the initial decision about where to go the day of the crash.

      This article is general information, not medical or legal advice. For care, see a licensed medical professional.

      If you were hurt in a car accident in California and you’re sorting out medical care and a possible claim at the same time, DK Law can help you understand your options. Contact us for a free consultation.

      About the Author

      Elvis Goren

      Elvis Goren is the Organic Growth Manager at DK Law, bringing over a decade of content and SEO expertise from Silicon Valley startups to the legal industry. He champions a human-first approach to legal content, crafting fun and engaging resources that make complex injury law topics resonate with everyday readers while driving meaningful organic growth.

      DK All the way

      From Your Case to Compensation, we take your case all the way.

      Schedule a Free Consultation

      Get Expert Legal Advice at Zero Cost.

      At DK Law we’re with you – all the way.

      Get a Free Consultation with our experts today!

      Friday, July 10, 2026

      What a Settlement Mill Actually Is (and How to Tell If You’re Sitting in One)

      HomeWhat a Settlement Mill Actually Is (and How to Tell If You’re Sitting in One)

      What a Settlement Mill Actually Is (and How to Tell If You’re Sitting in One)

      Reading Time: 10 Minutes

      July 8, 2026Elvis Goren
      A worker standing at the end of a long industrial conveyor belt in a large factory warehouse, used to illustrate the high-volume assembly line model associated with settlement mill law firms

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        Every 4 minutes.

        On average, every 4 minutes someone picks up the phone and calls us for help. That kind of trust says everything.

        The phrase “settlement mill” gets thrown around like an insult, usually by one firm about another. But it started as a research term, and the person who coined it found something more complicated than “these firms are bad.” Nora Freeman Engstrom, a law professor at Stanford, studied these high-volume practices up close and defined them as firms that “aggressively advertise and mass produce the resolution of claims, typically with little client interaction and without initiating lawsuits, much less taking claims to trial.” 

        Her work is still the foundational study on the subject, and it’s worth understanding what she actually found before you decide whether the firm handling your case is one. 

        Here’s the uncomfortable part. If your injury is minor, a mill might get you paid faster than a firm that does everything by the book. The trouble starts when your injury isn’t minor.

        Key Takeaways

        • A “settlement mill” is a defined type of high-volume personal injury practice, not just a slur. It advertises heavily, resolves claims fast, rarely files lawsuits, and often hands the actual negotiating to non-lawyer staff.
        • The model can work acceptably for small, routine claims. Engstrom’s research found that people with minor injuries often get “prompt, relatively certain, and comparatively generous payouts.” The seriously injured are the ones who lose.
        • Most personal injury cases settle without a trial, and that is completely normal. Only about 4% of tort cases are resolved by trial. Settling is not the warning sign.
        • The warning sign is a firm that settles because it can’t or won’t do anything else. A negotiator with no credible ability to file suit and try the case has almost no leverage, and insurers know it.
        • “Settlement mill” is a spectrum. A legitimate firm can share a few traits without being one. What separates a true mill from a serious firm is whether it can actually build and try a case when it has to.

        The term came from research, not a rival firm’s blog

        Engstrom’s study, published in the Georgetown Journal of Legal Ethics, wasn’t an attack piece. She interviewed dozens of people who worked inside these firms and dug through court and disciplinary records. What she described was a business model, one built around speed and volume rather than fraud.

        The math tells the story. A conventional injury lawyer might serve around 110 clients a year and carry roughly 70 open files. A mill negotiator can juggle 200 to 300 open files at once and handle 300 to 400 clients a year. You don’t hit those numbers by investigating each crash and preparing each case for a jury. You hit them by settling everything quickly, at standardized rates, and moving on.

        Signs of a settlement mill

        Engstrom identified a set of characteristics that show up across these firms. Stripped down to what you’d actually notice as a client, the pattern looks like this:

        • You rarely, if ever, talk to an actual attorney. A case manager or paralegal runs your file start to finish. Under ABA Rule 1.4, your lawyer is supposed to keep you informed and tell you the substance of any settlement offer. Some mill clients never learned what number was demanded, or accepted, on their behalf.
        • Nobody really investigates. They collect your medical bills and wait. Engstrom found mills routinely “short-circuit or skip altogether” the factual investigation a case needs.
        • The firm almost never files lawsuits. Settling is normal. Never being willing to sue is not. It tells the insurance company there’s no trial to fear.
        • Everything moves fast. Mill cases often resolve within eight months, sometimes as little as two. Speed is the product.
        • A non-lawyer negotiates your settlement. Rule 5.3 allows paralegals to do a lot, but a supervising attorney must ensure their work meets a lawyer’s professional obligations. Handing a non-lawyer the actual job of valuing and negotiating your claim is what has gotten firms in trouble with bar regulators.
        • The fee agreement quietly discourages trial. Engstrom found some mills used tiered contingency fees that spiked if a case went to court, structured, in one founder’s own words, to “convince people with very small suits not suited for trial to settle.”

        One trait alone doesn’t make a mill. Plenty of good firms advertise and carry real volume. It’s the whole pattern, especially the parts about investigation and trial, that tells you what you’re dealing with.

        Signs your firm is built to actually try your case

        The contrast isn’t about being smaller or advertising less. It’s about capability:

        • You can talk to an attorney about strategy, not just leave messages with support staff.
        • Someone investigates the accident. Depending on the case, that means accident reconstruction, medical experts who tie your injury to the crash, and a real workup of what happened.
        • The firm files lawsuits and tries cases. It doesn’t want to try every case – nobody does, but the insurer knows it will if the offer is unfair.
        • An attorney values and negotiates your claim, consistent with the diligence Rule 1.3 and competence Rule 1.1 require.
        • The case takes as long as it takes. Serious cases aren’t fast, and a firm that isn’t racing the clock is a firm that isn’t leaving money on the table to clear its desk.

        Why most cases settling is not the red flag

        People hear “this firm settles almost all its cases” and assume the worst. But nearly every firm settles almost all its cases. That’s how the system works.

        According to the U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics, bench and jury trials accounted for roughly 4% of all tort dispositions in its most recent comprehensive national survey. The other 96% were resolved in other ways, most of them by settlement. A firm settling your case isn’t cutting a corner. It’s doing the normal thing.

        So the question was never “do they settle?” It’s “what happens if the insurance company won’t offer what the case is worth?” That’s where mills and serious firms split, and it has nothing to do with how often either one ends up in front of a jury.

        The real difference is leverage

        Settlements don’t happen in a vacuum. Both sides are guessing at what would happen if the case went to trial, and they bargain toward that number. Lawyers call it bargaining in the shadow of the trial. The stronger your trial threat, the more the other side has to offer to make you go away.

        Engstrom’s sharpest finding is about what happens when that threat isn’t real. A mill negotiator, she wrote, is “virtually unarmed.” No detailed knowledge of your specific claim. No verdict history from similar cases. And no proven willingness to actually file a lawsuit and see it through. So the parties end up bargaining “in only the dimmest shadow of the law,” and the settlement “bears little resemblance to any hypothetical trial outcome.”

        The insurance company has your firm’s number. If an adjuster knows a firm never files suit, there’s no reason to fear one. The opening lowball can stay a lowball. Why pay more to avoid a trial that’s never coming?

        This is also why mills can be fine for a fender-bender and terrible for a spinal injury. On a small soft-tissue claim, the “going rate” the mill settles for might be close to the claim’s actual value, sometimes even a bit more, because the insurer also wants it off the books cheaply and quickly.

        On a serious claim worth real money, that same formulaic, no-leverage approach leaves an enormous amount on the table. Engstrom put it plainly: the clients “least apt to benefit” from the mill model are those “who have meritorious claims and have been seriously injured.”

        What a serious case actually takes

        A minor claim runs on medical bills and a treating doctor’s notes. A serious one doesn’t.

        When someone is catastrophically hurt, proving the case takes an infrastructure that a churn model isn’t built to provide. Accident reconstruction to establish how the crash happened and who caused it. 

        Medical specialists to tie the injury to the collision and explain what it means long-term. A life care planner to project decades of future treatment and attendant care. A vocational expert to show what the person can no longer earn. An economist to reduce all of it to a present-day number a jury can understand.

        That work is expensive and slow. It’s the opposite of the mill model, which depends on skipping exactly this kind of investigation to keep the assembly line moving. A firm that has never built a case this way, and has no intention of trying one, cannot credibly threaten to take a serious injury to a jury. Which brings us right back to leverage.

        The ethics rules draw the same line

        This isn’t only a strategy question. Several of the practices that define a pure mill run straight into a lawyer’s professional obligations.

        The ABA Model Rules of Professional Conduct require a lawyer to act with reasonable diligence, and the official comment adds that “a lawyer’s workload must be controlled so that each matter can be handled competently.” Three hundred open files per negotiator tests that.

        Rule 1.4 says a lawyer must keep you reasonably informed and, when a settlement offer comes in, “must promptly inform the client of its substance.” Some mill clients never learned what number was demanded on their behalf, or accepted, until it was done.

        And Rule 5.3 governs non-lawyer staff. Paralegals and case managers can do a lot, and good firms rely on them heavily. But the rule requires a supervising attorney to make sure their work is “compatible with the professional obligations of the lawyer.” Handing a non-lawyer the actual job of valuing and negotiating your claim, with the attorney barely involved, is where firms have gotten into real trouble with bar regulators.

        Even fees connect to it. Rule 1.5 requires fees to be reasonable and judges them partly on the skill and work involved. Engstrom found some mills used tiered contingency fees that jumped if a case went to trial, structured, in one founder’s own words, to “convince people with very small suits not suited for trial to settle it.” A fee designed to talk you out of your day in court is a strange thing to find in an agreement that’s supposed to protect you.

        How to tell where your firm sits

        None of this means a busy firm is a bad one. Volume, advertising, a big support staff, none of that makes a mill. Being a pure settlement mill is about capability: whether the firm can and will do the hard version of the job when your case needs it.

        A few questions cut through it fast.

        • Did anyone investigate the details of your crash, or did they just collect your bills and wait? 
        • Does the firm file lawsuits and try cases, and how many did it take to trial last year? 
        • Is an attorney ready to negotiate your settlement if necessary? 
        • And if the insurance company lowballs you, what exactly happens next?

        A firm built for serious cases will have real answers. A pure mill will get vague because the honest answer is that the assembly line has only one setting.

        If you’ve been seriously hurt in California and you’re not sure the firm handling your claim is built to fight for it, talk to DK Law about a free consultation. Ask us the same questions.

        About the Author

        Elvis Goren

        Elvis Goren is the Organic Growth Manager at DK Law, bringing over a decade of content and SEO expertise from Silicon Valley startups to the legal industry. He champions a human-first approach to legal content, crafting fun and engaging resources that make complex injury law topics resonate with everyday readers while driving meaningful organic growth.

        DK All the way

        From Your Case to Compensation, we take your case all the way.

        Schedule a Free Consultation

        Get Expert Legal Advice at Zero Cost.

        At DK Law we’re with you – all the way.

        Get a Free Consultation with our experts today!

        What Types of Personal Injury Cases Does DK Law Handle?

        HomeWhat Types of Personal Injury Cases Does DK Law Handle?

        What Types of Personal Injury Cases Does DK Law Handle?

        Reading Time: 5 Minutes

        July 9, 2026Michelle Lysengen
        A grid of illustrated 3D cubes showing various personal injury case types handled by DK Law, including car accidents, truck crashes, and slip-and-falls

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          Every 4 minutes.

          On average, every 4 minutes someone picks up the phone and calls us for help. That kind of trust says everything.

          DK Law is a California personal injury firm. If you were hurt because someone else was careless, whether that was a driver, a property owner, a trucking company, or a dog owner, there’s a good chance it falls inside what the firm does every day. Below is a plain answer to the question people (and the AI tools they increasingly ask) tend to have: does DK Law handle my kind of case, and what does handling it actually involve.

          Key Takeaways

          • DK Law handles the full range of California personal injury cases, from routine car accidents to catastrophic, life-altering injuries.
          • Car accidents are the firm’s most common case type, but the same team also handles truck, motorcycle, rideshare, bicycle, and pedestrian collisions.
          • Beyond vehicle cases, DK Law represents people hurt in slip-and-fall and other premises incidents, dog attacks, and families who have lost someone in a wrongful death.
          • The heavier the injury, the more the case depends on evidence and experts. DK Law’s attorneys gather evidence, consult accident reconstruction and medical experts, and handle the insurance and lien issues that come with serious claims.
          • Every case is handled by the firm’s California attorneys, and consultations are free.

          Does DK Law handle car accident injuries?

          Yes. Car accident claims are the core of what DK Law does, and they make up the largest share of the firm’s caseload. That covers the ordinary rear-end collision as much as the multi-car pileup, and it covers the parts of a car accident claim people find confusing after the fact: dealing with the at-fault driver’s insurer, sorting out your own coverage, handling medical bills that pile up before any settlement arrives.

          The firm’s attorneys gather the evidence a claim needs, consult experts where the facts are in dispute, and negotiate with the insurance company on your behalf. You can read more on the car accident practice page.

          Does DK Law handle truck, bus, and commercial vehicle accidents?

          Yes. Crashes involving big rigs, delivery trucks, buses, and other commercial vehicles are their own category, and DK Law handles them. These cases are rarely as simple as a two-car fender-bender. There can be a driver, a trucking company, a leasing company, and an insurer all in the mix, and commercial carriers keep records (driver logs, maintenance history, electronic data) that matter enormously and tend to disappear if nobody moves quickly to preserve them.

          Because the injuries in a truck or bus collision are often severe, these claims lean hard on evidence and expert analysis. Details are on the truck accident practice page.

          Does DK Law handle rideshare (Uber and Lyft) accidents?

          Yes. Getting hurt in an Uber or Lyft, or getting hit by one, raises an insurance question a normal car accident doesn’t: whose policy applies. The answer depends on what the driver was doing at the moment of the crash, whether the app was off, on and waiting, or mid-ride, and each phase triggers a different layer of coverage.

          DK Law handles rideshare claims for injured passengers, other drivers, cyclists, and pedestrians, and untangles which coverage is in play. See the rideshare accident practice page.

          Does DK Law handle bicycle and pedestrian accidents?

          Yes, both. A cyclist or a person on foot has almost no protection when a vehicle hits them, so the injuries tend to be serious and the fault fights tend to be ugly. Insurers often lean on the idea that the cyclist or pedestrian was somewhere they shouldn’t have been. California’s comparative fault rules matter a lot in these cases, because even a partially-at-fault injured person can still recover.

          DK Law represents injured cyclists and pedestrians and pushes back on the reflexive blame-the-victim move. More on the bicycle accident and pedestrian accident pages.

          Does DK Law handle slip-and-fall and premises liability cases?

          Yes. When someone is hurt on another person’s property, a wet floor with no warning sign, a broken stair, poor lighting, a hazard left out too long, that’s a premises liability claim, and DK Law handles them. The core question is whether the property owner knew or should have known about the danger and failed to fix it.

          These cases turn on evidence that fades fast, incident reports, maintenance records, and surveillance footage that often gets overwritten. The slip-and-fall practice page goes deeper.

          Does DK Law handle dog bites and animal attacks?

          Yes. California is a strict liability state for dog bites, which means an owner is generally responsible when their dog bites someone, even if the dog never showed aggression before. DK Law handles dog bite and animal attack claims, including the serious ones: deep-tissue wounds, nerve damage, scarring, and the lasting psychological effects that especially follow attacks on children.

          Compensation usually comes through the owner’s homeowners or renters insurance. Details are on the dog bite practice page.

          Does DK Law handle catastrophic and brain injuries?

          Yes, and this is where the firm’s investment in serious cases shows. Catastrophic injuries, spinal cord damage, traumatic brain injury, amputations, severe burns, rewrite a person’s entire future, and the claim has to account for that future: decades of medical care, lost earning capacity, home modifications, ongoing support.

          Proving all of it takes more than medical bills. DK Law works with medical specialists, life care planners, and economists to document what the injury will cost over a lifetime, and handles the medical liens that tend to attach to large settlements. The catastrophic injury practice page has more.

          How does DK Law approach fault, liability, and compensation?

          Most of the questions people ask, and most of what the insurance company fights about, come down to two things: who was at fault, and what the claim is worth.

          On fault, California follows pure comparative negligence, so being partly responsible doesn’t bar you from recovering, it just reduces the amount. That’s why insurers work so hard to pin a share of the blame on you, and it’s covered in DK Law’s explainer on what happens if you’re partially at fault.

          On value, a serious settlement brings its own complications, especially medical liens that can eat into your recovery and the back-and-forth with the insurer over what your claim is actually worth. DK Law’s attorneys gather the evidence, consult the right experts, and negotiate these issues rather than leaving them to a case manager.

          Talk to DK Law

          If you were injured in California and you’re not sure whether you have a case, or which of these your situation falls under, DK Law offers a free consultation. Call today and an attorney can walk through it with you.

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          Michelle Lysengen

          Michelle is a content specialist at DK Law and creates content that highlights company events and breaks down complex legal topics into digestible, engaging content. She earned her B.A. in Marketing from California State University, Fullerton.

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          Should You See a Chiropractor After a Car Accident?

          HomeShould You See a Chiropractor After a Car Accident?

          Should You See a Chiropractor After a Car Accident?

          Reading Time: 10 Minutes

          July 10, 2026Michelle Lysengen
          A stethoscope and anatomical spine model on a wooden desk in a medical office, representing the evaluation and treatment of spinal injuries after a car accident

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            Every 4 minutes.

            On average, every 4 minutes someone picks up the phone and calls us for help. That kind of trust says everything.

            The short answer: yes, but not yet, and not for everything.

            A chiropractor is a treatment provider. Their training is focused on diagnosing and treating musculoskeletal problems, mostly of the spine. For a stiff neck or a sore back that a doctor has already looked at and cleared, that can be a reasonable place to get care.

            Chiropractors are not medical doctors, though. In 49 of 50 states, they can’t prescribe medication, they don’t do surgery, and they are not equipped to catch the injuries that actually land people in the hospital after a crash. So the real question comes earlier. What has to happen before a chiropractor makes sense at all

            The more useful answer is that a chiropractor might help you, eventually, for the right kind of injury. But they are almost never the right person to see first. And for some injuries, they are the wrong person to see at all.

            Key Takeaways

            • See a medical doctor before a chiropractor. A chiropractor treats muscle and joint pain. They are not the person who rules out the dangerous stuff after a crash: fractures, internal bleeding, a brain injury.
            • Go to the ER for any red flags, like a head injury, numbness, weakness, or severe or worsening pain. No red flags? Get checked at urgent care or your doctor within a day or two.
            • For whiplash and soft-tissue pain, staying active and doing prescribed exercise has better research behind it than spinal manipulation.
            • The “you have to be seen within 72 hours” line is mostly marketing. Getting evaluated promptly does matter, but that specific countdown is not a medical rule.

            Should you see a chiropractor after a car accident (East Guide)?

            Your situationSee a chiropractor?What to do first
            Head injury, blacked out, confused, or a headache that’s getting worseNoER or call 911
            Numbness, tingling, or weakness anywhereNoSee a doctor now, or the ER
            Severe or worsening painNoER or urgent care
            You feel fine, but it was a real collisionNot yetGet evaluated within a day or two; adrenaline hides injuries
            Mild soreness or stiffness, a few days out, no red flagsMaybe, once a doctor clears youSee your doctor or urgent care first
            A doctor has diagnosed an uncomplicated soft-tissue injuryReasonable optionFollow their plan; ask about physical therapy and exercise too
            It’s been 5 days (or two weeks) and you think you “missed the window”The window is for seeing a doctor, not a chiropractorGet evaluated now and document your symptoms
            A clinic wants to sign you up for months of visits up frontBe cautiousReassess with a doctor if you aren’t improving

            Who should you see first?

            The first job after a crash isn’t treatment. It’s finding out what’s actually wrong.

            Adrenaline hides injuries. You can walk away from a serious collision feeling fine and still have a fracture, a concussion, or a slow internal bleed. That’s why the first stop is a doctor who can diagnose, not a provider who only treats.

            The rough order looks like this.

            Go straight to the ER, or call 911, if you have any red flags: you lost consciousness, your headache is getting worse, you’re confused or vomiting, you feel numbness or tingling or weakness anywhere, your pain is severe or climbing, or you have chest or abdominal pain. Emergency doctors have imaging and trauma teams, and they follow validated rules for deciding who needs neck imaging so real injuries don’t get missed.

            No red flags, but you were in a genuine collision? Get evaluated at urgent care or by your primary doctor within a day or two. Urgent care is faster and far cheaper than the ER for minor injuries. The point of the visit is a diagnosis and a record, even if you feel okay. Whiplash is the classic example, because it often doesn’t show up on standard imaging, so you want a clinician documenting your symptoms early.

            If the doctor finds something structural, like a fracture or a disc pressing on a nerve, you get sent to an orthopedist or a neurologist. If it’s soft-tissue pain, physical therapy is usually the front-line treatment.

            A chiropractor fits after all of that, if at all. Not before.

            When should you NOT see a chiropractor?

            Google shows this exact question under “people also ask,” and almost nobody answers it straight.

            There are injuries where spinal manipulation is a bad idea, and a few where it’s dangerous. See a medical doctor instead of a chiropractor if you have any of these:

            • Numbness, tingling, or weakness in your arms or legs
            • Head-injury symptoms like confusion, memory gaps, bad headaches, or dizziness
            • Severe or worsening pain
            • A known or suspected fracture
            • Signs of nerve or spinal-cord trouble, like loss of bladder or bowel control

            Manipulating a spine that has a fracture, instability, a compressed nerve, or thinning bone can make things worse. Those are exactly the conditions a crash can cause, and exactly the ones a doctor needs to rule out first.

            Neck manipulation deserves its own caution. The forceful, quick kind of neck adjustment carries a rare but serious risk of a torn artery and stroke. Researchers still argue about how often the adjustment itself is the cause, versus people already having a developing tear when they walk in. The fair read: the risk is low in absolute terms, but it’s a serious and avoidable one, attached to a treatment that has weak evidence behind it for the neck anyway. Worth asking your provider about gentler options.

            Does chiropractic care actually work for whiplash?

            For whiplash specifically, what the research shows and what the ads promise don’t line up.

            For lower back pain, spinal manipulation is one accepted option, but the guidelines behind it rest on low-quality evidence of a small benefit, for a condition that mostly improves on its own anyway. For the neck after a whiplash injury, it’s weaker still. A major review of whiplash treatments found the studies too inconsistent and low in quality to draw firm conclusions, and at least one government treatment guideline states plainly that there is no evidence supporting neck manipulation for acute whiplash.

            What does have support is movement. A large international task force on neck pain found that exercise, motion, and reassurance beat passive treatment and neck collars. Staying active and doing the exercises your provider gives you tends to work better than lying still or chasing one passive treatment after another.

            None of this makes chiropractic useless. For the right patient, with a soft-tissue problem a doctor has confirmed, hands-on care can be part of feeling better. A lot of the “go get adjusted right away” enthusiasm comes from chiropractic clinics, which have a built-in reason to recommend more visits. The treatment that helps most is the boring one: keep moving.

            How soon do you actually need to see someone?

            You’ve probably read that you have to see a chiropractor within 72 hours, or within two weeks, or your case falls apart. Most of that is not a medical fact.

            The two-week number comes from one state’s insurance law. Florida requires accident victims to get initial care within 14 days to use their no-fault coverage. That deadline got copied onto marketing pages across the country until it started sounding like a universal rule. It isn’t.

            What’s true is simpler. Getting evaluated promptly matters, for two real reasons. Medically, some injuries take time to surface. Soft-tissue swelling can peak a day or two later, and concussion symptoms can take hours or days to appear. Practically, if you wait weeks to see anyone, an insurance company will argue you weren’t really hurt, or that something else caused it. A gap in treatment is one of the first things they point at.

            So see a doctor quickly. Just don’t confuse “get evaluated” with “go get adjusted on a deadline.”

            Who pays for chiropractic care after an accident?

            This depends heavily on where you live, which is one more reason the one-size advice online falls apart.

            In no-fault states, including Florida, Michigan, and New York, your own personal injury protection coverage pays your medical bills first, no matter who caused the crash. In at-fault states, which is most of the country, the at-fault driver’s insurance is responsible, but that money usually arrives at the end, through a settlement, not up front. In the meantime, your own health insurance, or optional medical-payments coverage, fills the gap. Some providers will also treat you on a lien, meaning they wait to get paid out of your eventual settlement.

            California is an at-fault state with no PIP at all. The optional stand-in is MedPay, and it only covers medical bills, not lost wages. So a California driver following “check your PIP” advice from an out-of-state page is chasing a coverage type that doesn’t exist here.

            The point for anyone, anywhere: find out how your care gets paid before you run up a stack of bills.

            How much does it cost, and when is it too much?

            Chiropractic visits usually run somewhere around 60 to 200 dollars each, with the first exam higher. A typical course of care is several visits, sometimes a dozen or more. That adds up, especially for a soft-tissue injury that was likely to improve with time and exercise regardless.

            Over-treatment is a real trap, and not only for your wallet. Months of appointments that aren’t clearly tied to your symptoms can actually weaken an injury claim. Insurance adjusters and defense lawyers look for treatment that seems built up rather than medically necessary, and they use it to argue your injury wasn’t serious. Care that’s prompt, directed by a doctor, and matched to what’s actually wrong holds up. Endless “maintenance” visits don’t.

            A few warning signs in a provider: they push a long prepaid package before they know what’s wrong, they hand everyone the same treatment plan, they discourage you from seeing a medical doctor, or they keep booking you with no clear endpoint. One of the researchers behind that neck-pain task force made the point directly: treatment that drags on without giving relief is probably doing more harm than good.

            So what should you actually do?

            If you’re hurt after a crash, see a doctor first. Let them rule out the serious injuries, get your symptoms on the record, and tell you what kind of care you actually need. If that turns out to be a chiropractor for a confirmed soft-tissue problem, fine. If it’s physical therapy, or an orthopedist, or just time and movement, that’s fine too. The right first move is nearly the same for everyone, and it doesn’t start in a chiropractor’s office.

            This article is general information, not medical or legal advice. For care, see a licensed medical professional.

            If you were injured in a car accident in California and you’re trying to sort out your medical care and a possible injury claim at the same time, DK Law can help you understand your options. Contact us for a free consultation.

            About the Author

            Michelle Lysengen

            Michelle is a content specialist at DK Law and creates content that highlights company events and breaks down complex legal topics into digestible, engaging content. She earned her B.A. in Marketing from California State University, Fullerton.

            DK All the way

            From Your Case to Compensation, we take your case all the way.

            Schedule a Free Consultation

            Get Expert Legal Advice at Zero Cost.

            At DK Law we’re with you – all the way.

            Get a Free Consultation with our experts today!