In the days right after an accident, focus on what will matter most for both treatment and a potential claim:
- Get medical care right away (especially for head injuries, breathing issues, suction-related injuries, or near-drowning). If symptoms appear later, early treatment records help connect the dots.
- Document the scene while you can: photos/videos of the deck surface, ladder/handrail condition, gate closure, drain cover condition, warning signage, and water appearance.
- Preserve evidence: ask the property manager or homeowner to preserve surveillance footage, maintenance logs, and incident reports.
- Write down a timeline while memories are fresh: weather/lighting, how the pool area was set up, who was present, and what you noticed immediately before the injury.
- Be careful with statements: insurance representatives may request an early “recorded statement.” In many cases, that’s the moment families most need legal guidance.
If you’re considering an automated “legal bot” for pool injury questions, it can help you understand general steps. But it can’t review your medical history, identify Illinois-specific filing deadlines, or evaluate whether an insurer’s early offer matches the full impact of your injuries.


