“Labor Omnia Vincit” McKay Law​

Norman, OK Hip Injury Lawyer

Damage to the hip can dramatically affect your ability to walk, work, and live independently in Norman, OK. When an accident leaves you with hip trauma, you deserve full compensation for medical care, lost income, and lasting impact. McKay Law advocates for hip injury victims throughout OK. Common hip injuries broken hips, dislocations, torn cartilage, and chronic hip conditions resulting from trauma. Hip trauma carries special consequences because damage to the hip affects nearly every physical activity you do—with consequences that can change your life forever. Hip injuries are especially dangerous for elderly victims—many elderly hip fracture victims never fully recover their pre-injury function. Hip trauma is often caused by elderly falls in stores or apartment complexes, high-speed vehicle wrecks, and severe impact incidents. Care for hip trauma often involves major surgery—and many patients require multiple operations and lifelong follow-up. Many hip injury victims face permanent mobility limitations, chronic pain, reduced range of motion, leg length discrepancy, post-traumatic arthritis, difficulty walking or standing, inability to return to previous occupation, and loss of independence. Our Norman orthopedic injury lawyers know that hip injuries carry consequences that last for decades—they often require home modifications, mobility aids, and assistance with daily activities. That’s why we fight for full and fair compensation, including medical bills, future surgeries, hip replacement revisions, physical therapy, lost wages, lost earning capacity, pain and suffering, mental anguish, and loss of enjoyment of life. Many hip replacements eventually require revision surgery—making future medical costs a critical part of your damages. Insurers frequently push for quick settlements before the full impact is known—we don’t let them. We partner with medical experts and treating physicians to prove the long-term impact. All hip trauma claims is handled on a contingency fee basis—you pay nothing unless we win. Don’t sign anything without understanding the lifetime cost of your injury. Contact McKay Law today for a no-cost case review with a Norman, OK personal injury attorney who will fight for the full recovery you deserve.

Settlements Won
0 +
Million Dollars Won
0 +
Google 5 Star Reviews
0 +
Hip Injury Lawyer in Norman, OK | McKay Law

Hip Injury Lawyer in Norman, OK | McKay Law

What Is a Hip Injury Claim?

Hip injuries are among the most disabling injuries in personal injury law. The hip is a major weight-bearing joint, so damage to it impacts everything. Hip fractures, soft-tissue injuries, and joint damage frequently require surgery and lifetime treatment. For seniors particularly, hip injuries can be the start of a downward spiral leading to permanent disability or death. Our firm fights for hip injury victims in Norman and throughout Oklahoma.

How Hip Injuries Happen

  • Auto and motorcycle wrecks
  • Premises liability incidents
  • Falls of elderly residents
  • Workplace accidents
  • Product-related injuries
  • Recreational facility incidents
  • Walking or biking incidents
  • Hip implant failures
  • Assault and intentional acts

Categories of Hip Trauma

  • Broken hips:

  • Femoral neck fractures

  • Intertrochanteric fractures

  • Fractures below the greater trochanter

  • Pelvic ring fractures

  • Acetabular fractures

  • Hip dislocations:

  • Front dislocations

  • Backward hip dislocations

  • Soft-tissue injuries:

  • Labral tears

  • Femoroacetabular impingement

  • Hip flexor and groin injuries

  • Bursitis

  • Hip tendinitis

  • Post-traumatic conditions:

  • Arthritis after hip injury

  • Bone death from disrupted blood supply

  • Hip implant failures:

  • Loose hip implants

  • Metal-on-metal complications

  • Broken hip implants

Signs of Hip Trauma

  • Severe hip or groin pain
  • Inability to bear weight
  • Inability to ambulate
  • Mobility limitations
  • Pain spreading to the thigh
  • Visible deformity
  • Affected leg appears shorter
  • Leg rotation
  • Bruising and swelling
  • Nerve symptoms

Why Hip Injuries Matter

  • Significant disability — hip is essential for mobility
  • Most serious hip injuries require surgery
  • Hip replacement may be necessary
  • Recovery often takes a year or more
  • Lasting disability
  • Mortality risk in seniors
  • Career impact for physical work
  • Major expenses
  • Psychological impact

Hip Injuries in Senior Victims

Hip fractures kill more seniors than almost any other injury:

  • Up to 25% mortality rate within one year
  • Beginning of decline
  • Loss of independence
  • Permanent ambulation restrictions
  • Increased risk of pneumonia, blood clots, and other complications

Senior cases often involve significant damages.

Medical Care for Hip Injuries

  • X-rays, CT, MRI
  • Pain control
  • PT and rehabilitation
  • Manipulation to reset joint
  • Open reduction with internal fixation (ORIF)
  • Hip arthroplasty
  • Surface replacement
  • Replacement revision
  • Extended rehab
  • Long-term pain control

Who Pays

  • At-fault motorists
  • Landowners
  • Long-term care facilities
  • Companies in workplace injury cases
  • Makers of defective products
  • Hip implant manufacturers
  • Medical providers
  • Activity operators

Elements of Your Claim

  • Legal Obligation — There was a duty of care.
  • Breach — The defendant failed to meet that duty.
  • A Direct Link — The negligence caused your hip injury.
  • Quantifiable Losses — The financial and personal toll.

Recovery for Hip Injury Victims

  • Medical bills, past and future
  • Surgical expenses
  • Total hip replacement costs
  • Rehab costs
  • Long-term care
  • Lost wages and diminished earning ability, when the injury limits future work
  • Pain and suffering
  • Diminished quality of life
  • Damages for impact on relationships
  • Long-term restrictions
  • Future medical needs
  • Punitive damages where conduct was reckless

The Long-Term Impact

Despite aggressive treatment, many hip injuries leave permanent damage:

  • Reduced mobility for life
  • Chronic pain
  • Functional limitations
  • Future surgery
  • Higher risk of joint degeneration
  • Loss of physical work capacity
  • Increased fall risk
  • Ongoing PT

Time Limits to Be Aware Of

You typically have 2 years from the date of the incident to file (Okla. Stat. tit. 12, § 95). For nursing home and elder abuse cases, special discovery rules and notice requirements may apply.

What Working With Us Looks Like

We partner with treating orthopedic surgeons and physical therapists to establish the long-term impact, defeat “prior injury” defenses, account for the lasting damage, examine implant-related cases, and prepare every case as if it will go to trial.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: My elderly relative broke her hip in a fall — can we file a claim?

A: Definitely. These cases typically involve major damages.

Q: What does it cost to hire McKay Law?

A: Nothing. We only get paid if we win.

Q: How much is a hip injury case worth?

A: Value turns on diagnosis, treatment, work impact, and lasting damage. Hip replacement cases typically have substantial value.

Q: My hip replacement failed — can I sue?

A: Absolutely. Defective hip implants support product liability claims against the manufacturer.

Q: Insurance says my hip problem is from aging — are they right?

A: Often not. Aggravation of pre-existing conditions is fully compensable.

Q: Will I need future hip surgery?

A: Possibly. Lifetime surgical care is common with serious hip injuries. Case valuation must include these future costs.

Q: Should I give the insurance company a recorded statement?

A: Don’t. Call us first.

Q: What is the deadline to file?

A: Two years from the date of the incident (Okla. Stat. tit. 12, § 95). Move quickly — early treatment records strengthen claims.

Hip Injury Claims in Norman, OK

Hip injuries are uniquely consequential. Hip mechanics support virtually every standing and walking activity. Hip injury disrupts almost every activity. For older adults in particular, hip injuries carry mortality risk that other injuries don’t. An attorney familiar with these distinctive cases brings expertise in the distinctive damages framework hip injuries support.

Why Hip Injuries Are Distinctive

The Hip’s Functional Importance

The hip joint is fundamentally weight-bearing. Unlike many joints, the hip is constantly bearing weight during normal activity.

Hip injury affects:

  • Walking
  • Maintained vertical position
  • Time spent seated
  • Comfortable rest positions
  • Climbing stairs
  • Bending and twisting
  • Lifting
  • Driving
  • Sexual function

Hip Injuries Carry Mortality Risk

Especially in older adults, hip injuries carry significant mortality risk.

Research shows that hip fracture patients over 65 have higher mortality in the year following the fracture.

This drives significant damages, especially in cases where the hip injury contributed to death.

Hip Injuries Often Require Major Surgery

Many hip injuries require major surgical intervention. Hip surgery is significantly invasive, involving substantial surgical risks.

Long-Term Functional Consequences

Lasting functional impact is common.

Categories of Hip Injuries

Hip Fractures

Hip fractures dominate the serious hip injury category.

Femoral Neck Fractures

Femoral neck fractures are common. Surgical intervention is typical.

Intertrochanteric Fractures

Fractures between the trochanters of the femur are typical.

Subtrochanteric Fractures

Subtrochanteric region fractures are another fracture pattern.

Acetabular Fractures

Socket fractures are catastrophic. Acetabular damage can be very difficult to fix.

Hip Dislocations

Dislocations of the hip joint happen in significant trauma. These require emergency reduction to minimize long-term consequences.

Labral Tears

Labral tears can cause significant pain and dysfunction. Surgical repair often necessary.

Hip Bursitis and Tendinitis

Trochanteric bursitis may be triggered by accidents create chronic pain.

Hip Cartilage Damage

Cartilage damage in the hip joint accelerates degeneration.

Hip Osteonecrosis (Avascular Necrosis)

When blood supply to the hip is disrupted can cause the bone to die. This often follows traumatic injuries and usually leads to hip replacement.

Hip Joint Arthritis (Post-Traumatic)

Post-traumatic arthritis is common can develop over time.

Causes of Hip Injuries

Falls

Falls cause most hip fractures.

Elderly falls are particularly serious. Even modest falls in elderly people can cause hip fractures.

Motor Vehicle Accidents

Car, truck, and motorcycle crashes generate hip damage. Side-impact (T-bone) crashes are particularly likely to cause hip fractures.

Slip-and-Falls

Slipping accidents generate many hip cases. Slip-induced hip damage is a recurring pattern.

Workplace Injuries

Job-related injuries can cause hip damage.

Sports and Recreational Injuries

Sports incidents produce hip trauma.

Pedestrian and Cyclist Accidents

Vehicle strikes of pedestrians and cyclists produce hip damage.

Acetabular Fractures From High-Energy Trauma

Major force incidents cause socket damage.

Treatment for Hip Injuries

Conservative Treatment

Non-surgical treatment is sometimes possible, particularly for certain non-displaced fractures. Conservative treatment includes bed rest.

Surgical Treatment

Most significant hip injuries require surgery.

Internal Fixation

Internal fixation procedures is the standard approach.

Hip Replacement (Total Hip Arthroplasty)

Total hip replacement is common for severe injuries. This procedure includes installation of artificial joint components.

Hemiarthroplasty

Hemiarthroplasty replaces just the femoral head.

Hip Resurfacing

Resurfacing is a bone-preserving alternative.

Arthroscopic Surgery

For labral tears and similar injuries, minimally invasive arthroscopic procedures may be used.

Rehabilitation

Significant recovery is needed. Physical therapy typically extends for an extensive period.

Damages in Hip Injury Cases

These cases support meaningful compensation:

Medical and Surgical Costs

Medical costs are substantial:

  • Emergency room and initial care
  • Surgical expenses
  • Hospitalization
  • PT and rehabilitation
  • Continuing care
  • Mobility aids
  • Accessibility renovations

Future Medical Care

Joint replacements eventually wear out. Hip implants typically last 15-20 years leading to revision surgery.

Future hip surgery forms part of the damages claim.

Hip injury patients may also require future joint replacement, revision surgery, or other long-term care.

Lost Wages

Work absence is typically prolonged.

Diminished Earning Capacity

Hip damage affects physically demanding work.

Pain and Suffering

Hip pain is substantial.

Loss of Enjoyment of Life

Hip injuries change basic life experiences, supporting substantial non-economic damages.

Loss of Consortium

Hip injuries can substantially affect intimate relationships.

Wrongful Death

In fatal hip injury cases, wrongful death damages apply.

Special Considerations for Elderly Hip Injuries

Mortality Risk Affects Case Value

Statistical mortality risk after hip fracture drives damages.

For elderly hip injury cases, the hip injury may be a substantial cause of death.

Loss of Independence

Senior hip injury cases often involve loss of independence. These losses are compensable.

Multiple Comorbidities

Comorbidities are common in elderly patients. Pre-existing condition defenses, requiring careful medical analysis.

Common Insurance Defenses

“Pre-Existing Conditions”

For older plaintiffs, pre-existing conditions like osteoporosis, arthritis, and prior falls get used to challenge causation. The aggravation principle controls.

“Improper Treatment”

Treatment compliance challenges.

“The Injury Resolved Through Treatment”

Defense argues the injury healed completely. This defense fails when surgery is required, when revision surgery is anticipated, or when functional limitations persist.

“Comparative Fault”

Defense pushes shared-fault arguments.

“Aging-Related Decline, Not the Accident”

For older plaintiffs, defense often argues age-related decline rather than accident causation.

Critical Steps After a Hip Injury

Get Immediate Medical Attention

Same-day medical attention is critical.

Get Imaging Studies

Hip imaging studies provide essential diagnostic information.

Follow Through With Recommended Treatment

Following all recommendations builds the medical record.

Document Functional Impact

Record real-world impact.

Track All Symptoms

Pain, mobility limitations, sleep issues, emotional effects.

Photograph Recovery

Visual documentation of recovery.

Don’t Sign Releases Without Counsel

The full damages picture takes time to emerge. Quick settlements often substantially undervalue hip cases.

Attorney Costs

Counsel experienced with hip injury claims charge no upfront fees. Specialty expertise costs reimbursed from the recovery.

Move Quickly

Hip injury cases benefit from prompt legal involvement.

Comprehensive ongoing documentation provides better evidence. OK’s statute of limitations sets a hard cutoff.

Engaging counsel right away ensures comprehensive documentation.

McKay Law Is Your Norman Advocate After A Hip Injury

Few injuries change daily life as drastically as a serious hip injury. The hip is the anchor of nearly every movement we make — walking, standing, sitting, climbing stairs, getting in and out of a car, even rolling over in bed — and when a fracture strikes, the whole day becomes a struggle. Hip injuries are common in car crashes, falls from heights, slip-and-fall accidents on hard surfaces, pedestrian accidents, and incidents on poorly maintained property — and they fall particularly hard on older adults, where a broken hip can trigger a cascade of complications that substantially reduce independence and life expectancy. At McKay Law, we handle hip injury cases by partnering with orthopedic surgeons, physical therapists, and life-care planners who can capture the full scope of the damage and map out the future care a victim will need.

The treatment path for a serious hip injury often encompasses surgical repair or full hip replacement, weeks of hospitalization and inpatient rehabilitation, months of outpatient physical therapy, and, in numerous cases, permanent loss of range of motion or chronic pain. Insurance companies tend to brush aside these claims by pointing to degenerative conditions, even when the trauma is what caused the failure. When you join the McKay Law family, we won’t allow those tactics and pursue every dollar your recovery requires. We fight for full compensation for emergency care, surgery and hip replacement, hospitalization and inpatient rehab, ongoing physical therapy, mobility aids and home modifications, prescription costs, future medical needs, lost wages, loss of livelihood, the loss of independence and quality of life, and the deep pain and limitation a hip injury leaves behind. Call us today at (866) 679-9651 or contact us online to set up your free consultation and get a firm that grasps what a hip injury really takes from you fighting for you.

Video Testimonials

The McKay Law Difference

See why so many others choose McKay Law, PLLC

With over 300 five-star reviews, McKay Law, your local Personal Injury Law Firm has earned the trust and gratitude of our clients. Every case we handle is unique, and every client’s story matters. Don’t just take our word for it—hear directly from our clients about their experiences and why they confidently recommend us to others.

All Our Practice Areas

Scroll to Top