Texas cases often turn on early documentation. If you’re able, focus on steps that protect your health and preserve the facts:
- Get discharge paperwork and copies: discharge instructions, diagnosis list, medication list, and any return precautions.
- Write down the timeline while it’s fresh: when symptoms started, when you arrived, what you told triage, and how long you waited for evaluation.
- Save imaging and lab information: request reports (and keep any discs/printouts if provided).
- Follow up medically: a delay in treatment can complicate causation questions and may affect what experts later can say.
- Be careful with recorded statements: adjusters and hospital representatives may ask for details—don’t answer in a way that undermines your claim.
If you’re dealing with transportation stress, shift-work fatigue, or language barriers that can arise in cross-border communities, clarity matters even more. Your account and the chart must line up.


