After a crush injury, your priorities are safety and documentation—before insurance adjusters start asking questions.
1) Get medical care and follow treatment plans
- Even if pain seems “manageable,” crush injuries can involve hidden damage (nerve injury, fractures, internal tissue trauma, swelling complications).
- Ask your provider to document the mechanism of injury and your functional limitations.
2) Preserve the incident details while they’re fresh Write down:
- What you were doing right before the accident
- The equipment involved (press, dock system, conveyor, forklift, gate/door, hoist, etc.)
- Whether safety guards, barriers, or lockout/tagout procedures were in place
- Witness names and what they saw
3) Request key records early In Maplewood-area workplaces, records often include:
- Incident report numbers
- Safety training logs
- Maintenance and inspection history for the specific machine or area
- Supervisor communications about work restrictions
4) Don’t sign away rights or give broad statements too soon Insurers and employers may ask for recorded statements quickly. In Minnesota, what you say can shape how fault and damages are evaluated. A lawyer can help you respond carefully.


