If you think you may have an internal injury, focus on these steps before you speak too much to anyone else:
- Get medical care promptly (ER or urgent care depending on symptoms). Internal bleeding and organ injuries can worsen.
- Ask for copies of your records: discharge summary, imaging reports, lab results, and follow-up instructions.
- Write down your timeline the same day or the next morning—what happened, where you were (worksite, parking lot, street), and when symptoms changed.
- Preserve incident documentation: crash reports, witness names, photos of the scene, and any property incident paperwork.
- Be careful with insurance statements. If you’re asked to explain symptoms, stick to what you know and what your medical records support.
In Evansville, it’s common for incidents to involve mixed environments—construction zones, busy parking lots, and high-traffic commuting routes—so the “what happened” details can be critical when insurers argue the injury doesn’t match the mechanism.


