In serious injury cases, delays often happen for understandable reasons—appointments, pain, family responsibilities, and insurance calls. But early decisions can affect evidence and settlement leverage.
Within the first 72 hours, prioritize:
- Get medical care and keep every record. In Massachusetts, documentation of symptoms, imaging, and follow-up treatment is often the difference between a claim that “sounds serious” and one that is provably serious.
- Write down what happened while it’s fresh. Include where you were, road conditions, traffic patterns, weather, and any witnesses you can recall.
- Preserve incident information. Save incident numbers, discharge paperwork, prescriptions, and any photos taken at the scene.
- Be careful with insurance statements. Adjusters may ask for recorded statements quickly. In catastrophic cases, those statements can be used later to challenge causation or severity.
If you’re searching for an “AI catastrophic injury lawyer” because you want something that can organize this chaos instantly—use any tools you like for note-taking, but don’t let them replace attorney review of your medical facts and legal duties.


