In the days after an injury, people often focus on appointments, pain management, and transportation. But insurers also move quickly—requesting recorded statements, demanding documents, and offering early “help” that can shape the outcome.
Before you respond to adjusters or sign anything, consider this local-first checklist:
- Request copies of every medical record you can (ER notes, imaging reports, discharge papers, follow-ups).
- Write down your timeline while it’s fresh: where you were, what happened, what you felt immediately after, and how symptoms changed.
- Keep receipts and travel logs for medical visits (including rides to specialists outside Woodward when applicable).
- Avoid recorded statements or broad explanations until your lawyer reviews what’s being asked and why.
A paralysis case in Oklahoma often turns on whether the evidence supports what caused the paralysis and how severe and permanent it is—not just that an injury occurred.


