After a pedestrian collision, the most important actions are often the least “legal-looking.” They protect your health and preserve the facts when memory and insurance narratives start to shift.
If you can, do these right away:
- Get medical care even if symptoms seem minor. Ohio injury cases often turn on documentation. Delayed treatment can be used to question causation.
- Report the crash and keep the incident details. If police respond, request the report information.
- Capture the scene while you can: crosswalk location, traffic signals, lighting conditions, vehicle position, and any visible road hazards.
- Write down what you remember—where you entered the roadway, what the driver did right before impact, and whether you had the walk signal.
- Avoid recorded statements to insurance until you understand how they may frame the event.
For Kent pedestrians, a common complication is that the crash may occur near areas with heavier foot traffic (students, commuters, visitors). That means witnesses may be nearby—but they also may leave quickly. Getting contact information early can make a major difference.


