Seeking Immediate Medical Care After a High-Speed Crash
Emergency Response: Call 911 immediately. High-speed crashes often cause injuries requiring emergency medical services. Don't refuse ambulance transport—some injuries aren't immediately apparent.
Emergency Room Evaluation: ERs prioritize life-threatening injuries but may miss others in the chaos. If you have any symptoms—even minor ones—make sure they're documented. Return if new symptoms develop.
Why High-Speed Crashes Need Extra Attention: The forces involved in high-speed impacts can cause internal injuries, brain trauma, and spinal damage that aren't obvious initially. Symptoms may emerge hours or days later.
Follow-Up Care: Don't assume you're fine after leaving the ER. Follow up with your primary care doctor within a few days. Report all symptoms, even ones you think are unrelated.
Specialist Referrals: High-speed crash injuries often require specialists: neurologists for head injuries, orthopedists for fractures, spine specialists for back injuries, and psychologists for trauma. Follow through on all referrals.
Documentation: Medical records become evidence. Be thorough in describing your symptoms, limitations, and how the accident happened. "High-speed collision" should appear in your records.
Common Delayed Symptoms to Watch For
Head Injury Symptoms: Headaches (especially worsening ones), dizziness, confusion, memory problems, difficulty concentrating, mood changes, sleep disturbances, nausea, sensitivity to light or noise. These may indicate traumatic brain injury.
Neck and Back Pain: Whiplash and spinal injuries often develop gradually. Pain, stiffness, numbness, tingling, or weakness in extremities all warrant immediate medical evaluation.
Abdominal Pain: Internal bleeding from organ damage may not cause immediate symptoms. Pain, swelling, dizziness, or fainting can indicate internal injuries requiring emergency care.
Psychological Symptoms: PTSD, anxiety, depression, and driving fear commonly develop after severe crashes. These are legitimate injuries deserving treatment and compensation.
When to Seek Emergency Care: Return to the ER immediately for severe headaches, loss of consciousness, confusion, seizures, severe abdominal pain, difficulty breathing, or any dramatic worsening of symptoms.
Documentation: Keep a daily log of symptoms, pain levels, limitations, and how the accident affects your life. This becomes valuable evidence for your claim.
Long-Term Care for Catastrophic Injuries
Life Care Planning: For severe injuries, we engage life care planners who project lifetime medical needs. These plans detail future surgeries, therapies, equipment, medications, home modifications, and attendant care needs.
Rehabilitation: Serious injuries require extensive rehabilitation: physical therapy, occupational therapy, speech therapy, cognitive rehabilitation, and vocational retraining. These services continue for months or years.
Medical Equipment: Wheelchairs, hospital beds, communication devices, prosthetics, and other equipment may be needed permanently. Costs include initial purchase, maintenance, and replacements.
Home Modifications: Severe injuries may require home accessibility modifications: ramps, widened doorways, bathroom modifications, stair lifts, and smart home technology.
Attendant Care: Many catastrophic injury survivors need daily assistance with personal care, household tasks, and medical needs. Home health aides, nursing care, or facility placement create ongoing costs.
Future Medical Costs: We calculate the present value of all projected future medical expenses. For a young person with severe injuries, this can amount to millions of dollars over their lifetime.
Structured Settlements: For long-term care needs, structured settlements can provide tax-advantaged income streams ensuring money is available when needed throughout life.