In the first hours, your actions can affect both your health record and the evidence insurers rely on.
- Get checked promptly (urgent care or ER if warranted). Even if pain seems minor, delayed symptoms are common.
- Document while it’s fresh: photos of the roadway, traffic control, lighting conditions, vehicle positions, and any debris or roadway defects.
- Write down key details before they fade—what you saw, what the driver did, and what you heard (honking, braking, warnings).
- Preserve witnesses: if someone stopped, get names and contact info. In suburban areas, people often leave quickly.
- Be cautious with statements to insurers or the at-fault driver’s representative. A short remark can become a liability argument later.
If you’re wondering whether an AI tool can help you “organize” what happened, that can be useful for creating a timeline—but it can’t replace medical documentation or legal review of what the evidence actually proves.


