The biggest mistakes after a pedestrian hit often happen early, when people are overwhelmed.
Do these locally relevant steps right away:
- Get medical care even if you feel “mostly okay.” California injury claims often turn on documentation. Delayed symptoms (concussion, back/neck pain, soft-tissue injuries) are common after pedestrian impacts.
- Request a police report (if applicable) and keep the report number. For many Long Beach crashes, your report becomes a key reference point for insurance and later negotiations.
- Document the scene while it’s still there. If it’s safe, take photos of the crosswalk/curb area, nearby signage, lighting, traffic signals, and any construction or detour conditions.
- Write down details while they’re fresh. Include the direction you were walking, what the driver did right before impact, and whether there were buses, rideshare drop-offs, or event traffic nearby.
If you’re wondering whether an AI pedestrian injury assistant can help you “organize” things—yes, it can help you compile a timeline and question list. But it can’t replace the real work of building a claim around evidence, medical causation, and California case realities.


