The Shoulder
The Shoulder
59
Car accidentspatient-stoat-598

Side-swiped at an intersection last week — first accident ever and I'm a mess

I still can't believe this happened. I was heading home after my shift, cruising through a green light, and out of nowhere a pickup truck blew through the cross street and plowed right into the passenger side of my car. Cops came, I got a report number, and the other driver got cited on the scene — so at least fault seems pretty clear.

I ended up getting taken to the ER by ambulance because my shoulder and ribs were hurting so bad I could barely breathe deeply. Spent a few hours there, got X-rays and a CT scan. Diagnosis was a moderate shoulder sprain and bruised ribs. They sent me home with a sling and some pain meds and told me to follow up with an orthopedic specialist.

The part that's really gutting me? I literally just got this car detailed and paid off the last chunk of my loan three weeks ago. THREE WEEKS. And now the whole driver's side is caved in. Insurance adjuster from the other driver's company already called me — same day, which felt weirdly fast — and was super chatty and friendly, asking me how I was feeling.

I don't really know what I'm doing here. I've never dealt with insurance claims, I've never been hurt in an accident, and I honestly don't even know what questions to ask. Do I just... let the adjuster handle everything? Do I need a lawyer? How long does something like this typically take to sort out?

Any advice from people who've actually been through this would mean a lot right now. I'm sore, stressed, and kind of overwhelmed.

10replies

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10 replies

  • 21
    humble-marmot-555

    I went through something almost identical two years ago — green light, side impact, clear fault on the other driver. The "friendly adjuster" thing is SO real. She was so nice and I thought great, easy process. Then the lowball offer came and I realized the niceness was just a tactic. I ended up getting a PI attorney and it made a huge difference. Most of them don't charge you anything unless you actually win.

  • 17
    clever-stoat-517

    Did you get the other driver's insurance info directly, or just through the police report? And do you have your own uninsured/underinsured coverage? Worth knowing what your own policy says too, because sometimes it's actually easier to go through your own insurance first and let them fight it out. Just asking because it affects the advice here.

  • 15
    bold-fox-221

    A couple of practical things: First, request a copy of the police report as soon as it's available — it'll have the citation info and the other driver's insurance details all in one place. Second, photograph everything — your car, your injuries, even your sling. Third, keep every single receipt and document related to this: ER visit, prescriptions, any Uber rides because you can't drive, all of it. That paper trail is what builds a claim.

  • 14
    kind-crow-752

    That fast callback from the other driver's adjuster is a major red flag — they're not calling because they care about you. They want to get a recorded statement and potentially lock you into describing your injuries before you even know the full extent of them. Do NOT give a recorded statement yet. Seriously, just tell them you're still being evaluated by doctors and you'll be in touch.

    • 2
      curious-traveler513

      Appreciate the detailed write-up. Saving this for later.

  • 13
    daring-owl-514

    I used to work on the insurance side and I'll be honest with you — when we called that fast, it was a strategy. The goal is to build rapport and get information before you lawyer up. They'll use anything you say casually about feeling "okay" or "not too bad" against you later when valuing your claim. You don't have to be rude, but you don't have to cooperate with their timeline either.

    • 18
      humble-seal-023

      Not legal advice, but in general: when liability is clear and there are documented injuries, it's usually worth at least a free consultation with a personal injury attorney before you engage too deeply with the other party's insurer. The adjuster represents their client's interests, not yours. Many PI attorneys work on contingency so there's no upfront cost. Just something to consider before you sign or say anything.

  • 11
    clever-raven-006

    Please take the orthopedic follow-up seriously and don't skip it even if you start feeling a little better in the next few days. Rib and shoulder injuries can feel manageable at first because of the adrenaline and the initial meds, then flare up badly around day 4-7. Also keep a daily journal of your pain levels and what you can't do — that documentation matters more than most people realize.

  • 10
    daring-swan-816

    Short version: don't talk to their adjuster beyond the basics, see the orthopedic doctor and follow through on ALL recommended treatment, and get at least one free consult with a PI lawyer before you accept anything. You're not being difficult or greedy — you're protecting yourself after someone else caused this.

  • 8
    genuine-otter-508

    I'm so sorry this happened to you. The timing with the car being just paid off is absolutely brutal, that's just genuinely unfair. Please don't try to tough it out — ask for help from people around you and make sure you're actually resting. The stress of dealing with all the claim stuff on top of a real physical injury is a lot.