Right after a crash, your actions can affect both your health and your claim. Use this checklist as your immediate priority order:
-
Get medical care and ask for documentation
- Even if you “feel okay,” injuries like concussions, soft-tissue trauma, and shoulder/wrist damage can worsen over days.
- Request copies of discharge instructions, imaging reports, and follow-up notes.
-
Document the scene while you still can
- Photos of the roadway, traffic signals/signage, lane position, debris, skid marks (if any), and vehicle damage.
- If there’s construction or lane shifting, capture what the road looked like at the time.
-
Write down details from your memory before insurance calls
- Where you entered the intersection, what the light/sign showed, and what the other driver did right before impact.
- Names and contact info for anyone who saw the crash.
-
Be careful with statements
- Insurers may request recorded statements quickly. In many Ohio cases, what you say early can be used to argue fault or downplay injury severity.
If you want faster organization, an AI-assisted intake tool can help you build a clean timeline of what happened and what evidence you already have. But it should support your lawyer—not replace the legal review of your facts.


