Right after a pedestrian accident, the details can fade fast—especially after winter storms, street maintenance, or signal timing changes. To protect your health and your claim:
- Get medical care right away, even if symptoms seem minor. Some injuries (like concussions, internal bruising, and soft-tissue damage) may not show up immediately.
- Document the scene while it’s still there: take photos of the crosswalk or corner, vehicle position, weather/lighting, and where you were standing.
- Write down your memory while it’s fresh: what you saw, what you heard, the driver’s actions, and whether there were pedestrians nearby.
- Identify witnesses early (people waiting for a bus, bystanders, passersby near businesses, or anyone who saw the approach).
- Avoid recorded statements to insurance without talking to a lawyer first—what feels like “just explaining” can be used to reduce your claim.
If you’re wondering whether an AI pedestrian injury tool can help you organize this, the right answer is: it can help you draft a timeline or checklist. But it can’t replace legal strategy—particularly when fault is disputed or injuries evolve over time.


