Car accident evaluation in Lancaster
A lot of Lancaster patients do not feel the real pattern until they are back to stairs, groceries, lifting, getting the house going, or carrying something from one room to another.
That is when low-back, hip, and SI-area pain stop feeling vague and start feeling stubborn. Lancaster is a strong first stop when lower-body pain becomes obvious through stairs, lifting, carrying, and basic chores, because that kind of loading can make it much clearer whether the problem is more back, hip, SI, disc, nerve, or joint related.
No copays, no deductibles, and no upfront costs.
How to find us
Getting to the Lancaster Clinic
Use GPS to the West Entrance at Suite 200. If you are dropping someone off, the front main entrance is the easier drop-off point.
Car accident injuries come first here, though the clinic also sees work injuries, sports injuries, and injuries that happen at home.
Low-back, hip, or SI pain that keeps hanging on often becomes much clearer once routine loading keeps bringing it back to your attention.
This clinic also makes sense for south-side follow-up when symptoms are still changing over the first few days or the first week.
Stairs, lifting, and carrying can make it much easier to tell whether the problem is more back, hip, SI, disc, nerve, or joint related.
The visit should turn “I am still hurting” into something more useful than guessing.
We ask when the pain became obvious, whether stairs, lifting, carrying, or chores brought it out, and what has stayed stubborn.
Back, hips, SI-area, joints, motion, and strength are checked, and nerve-related symptoms get checked directly when they are part of the story.
Discharge paperwork and imaging reports help us see what has already been done.
You should leave knowing what we think is driving the symptoms and what to do next.
When lower-body pain stays active after a crash, treatment should match what the exam is showing, not just time passing.
Care for neck, back, joint, and nerve pain after a car accident.
ER imaging and other studies are reviewed when they help explain the pattern.
Available when the exam and imaging support that next step.
Used when the injury pattern points that way.
Headache, dizziness, fogginess, and other post-head-impact symptoms are evaluated here.
When appropriate, the next step can include surgical evaluation and recommendation.
Lancaster is strongest when the problem lives in the lower half of the body and keeps showing up with real-life loading.
Stairs, lifting, carrying, and getting through a normal day at home can make the pain pattern much clearer. A lot of people feel manageable at first, then routine movement makes the injury feel more specific and more stubborn.
This clinic makes sense when follow-up close to home matters and you need a clearer answer about whether the pain is more back, hip, SI, disc, nerve, or joint driven. The goal is simple: clearer answers, less guessing, and a plan you can keep up with.
Lancaster is strongest when lower-body pain becomes obvious with stairs, lifting, carrying, and basic chores.
Yes. Those pain patterns often become more obvious once you are back to stairs, lifting, and normal movement.
Stairs load the back, hip, pelvis, and SI area differently. That often makes the pain pattern easier to identify.
Because those movements expose lower-body and midline loading problems that may not have felt obvious right after the crash.
That should be evaluated. Radiating pain, tingling, numbness, or weakness can suggest nerve irritation.
Say that early in the visit. Headache, dizziness, fogginess, and other post-head-impact symptoms can be evaluated here too.
If the pain is lingering, getting sharper, or interfering with sleep, driving, chores, or work, it is reasonable to get evaluated sooner rather than waiting weeks.
Yes, when appropriate. In-office fluoroscopy-guided injections, joint injections, and PRP injections are available here if your exam and imaging support that next step.
Yes. The clinic also evaluates work injuries, sports injuries, and injuries that happen at home when the same neck, back, joint, or nerve patterns are involved.
Call the clinic and let the team know what is still not settling. They can help you find the next available appointment.
If stairs, lifting, or normal chores are what made the injury pattern obvious, these physician-written articles go deeper into the lower-body, nerve, and post-impact symptom patterns that often bring people in after a wreck.