In Washington, your claim lives or dies on the connection between the event and the medical findings. That connection is harder to establish when symptoms appear later, imaging is delayed, or records are incomplete.
After a collision on your commute or a fall around a local property, your next step should be medical evaluation—especially if you have symptoms like:
- worsening abdominal or chest pain
- dizziness, nausea, or unusual fatigue after impact
- bruising that doesn’t match the severity you felt
- shortness of breath, headaches, or numbness
- pain that escalates over 24–72 hours
Waiting “to see if it passes” can be risky with internal trauma. Even if you’re unsure, getting checked creates the documentation insurers and adjusters must address.


