In small communities, key details can be lost quickly—surveillance gets overwritten, witnesses move on, and insurance calls start before you’ve fully processed what happened.
Here’s a practical sequence we recommend to protect both your health and your claim:
- Get medical care immediately and follow the care plan. In Utah, insurers often scrutinize whether treatment was timely and consistent.
- Write down a timeline while it’s fresh (even short notes). Include weather, road conditions, lighting, where you were standing/working, and what you remember.
- Collect incident paperwork (or request copies): accident report number, employer incident report, ER discharge paperwork, and any imaging results.
- Be careful with statements to insurance representatives. A recorded statement can be used to argue the injury is less severe or unrelated.
- Ask about evidence preservation if there’s video—dash cams, door cameras, or nearby business systems.
If you’re looking for “AI help” to organize what you have, an assistant can help you format notes and list documents—but in catastrophic cases, a lawyer still needs to review the facts, the medical record, and Utah-specific procedural timing.


