Early actions can make or break how your claim is evaluated later. While you focus on medical care, consider these practical steps:
- Get treated and ask for a full workup if you have head, neck, back, or internal injury symptoms. Documenting the full medical picture matters.
- Write down what you remember before meetings start. Note the date/time, where the scaffold was positioned, how you accessed it, and what you observed about guardrails, decking/planks, or tie-ins.
- Save jobsite information. If you receive incident paperwork, keep copies. If you can safely do so, take photos of the scaffold setup (guardrails, access points, any missing components), surrounding ground conditions, and the area where you landed.
- Be careful with statements. In Seymour, as in the rest of Indiana, injured workers are often asked to provide “quick” accounts. Avoid giving recorded statements until you’ve spoken with counsel.
Tip: Even if the fall seems obvious, liability often turns on details like proper assembly, inspection practices, and whether fall protection was properly provided and used.


