Right after a pedestrian collision, the timeline matters. In many Canby crashes, the first 24–72 hours decide how easily your claim can be verified later.
- Get medical evaluation—even if you feel “mostly okay.” Oregon law doesn’t require you to prove everything with one exam, but your medical record should reflect your symptoms early.
- Document the scene while it’s still there. If you can, take photos of:
- crosswalk markings, signals, or lack of signage
- vehicle position and any visible traffic-control devices
- lighting conditions (evening visibility can be a factor in suburban areas)
- injuries and where you were standing
- Write down what you remember before it fades. Include the direction you were walking, whether you stepped into a lane, and what the driver did immediately before impact.
- Avoid recorded statements or detailed “explanations” to insurance. You can be polite without volunteering facts that later get reinterpreted.
If you want a quick way to organize your information, an AI pedestrian accident evidence organizer can help you build a timeline—but it can’t replace the legal work needed to handle Oregon insurance tactics and liability disputes.


