The decisions you make early can affect whether your claim stays strong. While you should always prioritize medical care, there are practical steps you can take right away:
- Get the medical visit documented: ask that your symptoms and the mechanism of injury are clearly recorded. If you were told to file worker reports, make sure your account matches what you reported to medical providers.
- Preserve the “scene story”: take photos (or have someone take them) of the hazard, the area’s condition, and any safety measures that were present—especially anything related to ladders, scaffolding, elevated work, debris/housekeeping, or access routes.
- Write down the sequence while it’s fresh: where you were standing, what you were doing, what equipment/tools were involved, who was directing the work, and whether warnings were given.
- Be careful with recorded statements: insurers and contractors sometimes push for early statements. In Louisiana, those early versions can become a focal point later, so it’s smart to review your situation with a lawyer before agreeing to anything.
If you’re wondering whether an AI construction accident “assistant” can help you organize notes and documents, the short answer is: it can help you organize—but it can’t replace legal strategy. A lawyer helps you decide what to preserve, what to request, and what not to say.


