After a Crash — The Complete Protocol [Safety Series #4]

The crash is over, but the noise hasn't stopped. If you're replaying those seconds over and over, wondering what you should have said, what you should have documented, what comes next, this video is the one that answers all of it. The complete after-crash protocol: the scene, the other party, the insurance call, and the days that follow. EMERGENCY VIDEO for at the Crash Scene Guide:    • Motorcycle Crash: What To Do RIGHT NOW [Sa...   The crash is over. You feel fine. That feeling is lying to you. Adrenaline-induced analgesia, documented in emergency medicine, means you can have a fractured spine, internal bleeding, or a serious concussion and feel nothing. Feel completely capable of walking away and getting back on your bike. The danger window isn't immediately after impact. It's 20–40 minutes later, when the adrenaline wears off and people who felt fine suddenly deteriorate. Fast. What you say, what you photograph, and what you sign in the next 60 minutes will determine your health outcome, your insurance claim, and your legal position for months to come. Research on post-traumatic cognitive function shows your brain is not operating normally in this window. You need a pre-decided protocol, not in-the-moment decisions. ⏱ CHAPTERS 00:00 Introduction & who this video is for & what is covered 02:00 Your body's response: adrenaline, analgesia & the danger window 04:09 What to say at the scene: exact words 07:36 Document everything: the 6-shot sequence 09:47 The other party: hostile, wants to settle, or tries to leave 12:48 The insurance call & the days after (concrete 7-day recovery timeline) 📋 THE AFTER-CRASH PROTOCOL COVERS: → Adrenaline-induced analgesia — why "I feel fine" is not a diagnosis → Post-traumatic cognitive narrowing — why your brain cannot make reliable decisions right now → The exact words to say to police, the other party, and insurers → The 6-shot documentation sequence: wide, medium, close, gear, injuries, witnesses → Why witness memory degrades within 20 minutes — and CCTV overwrites in 24–48 hours → How to handle aggressive, cooperative, and hit-and-run scenarios → Why you should never agree to a roadside settlement → The 24–72 hour soft tissue and concussion symptom window → Post-crash anxiety — what it is, why it's normal, and when to get help → Legal advice, timing and insurance claim protection This protocol applies whether you ride in Thailand, Australia, the UK, the US, or anywhere in the world. 🔗 FULL SERIES: Before, During & After | Motorcycle Crash & Safety Series Safety Series #1 How to read traffic (Before):    • Emergency Braking and Swerving — The Two S...   Safety Series #2 Emergency braking and swerving (During):    • Emergency Braking and Swerving — The Two S...   Safety Series #3 Emergency guide — what to do at a crash scene:    • Motorcycle Crash: What To Do RIGHT NOW [Sa...   Safety Series #4 After a crash — the full protocol:    • After a Crash — The Complete Protocol [Saf...   Safety Series #5 Why crashes happen:    • Why Crashes Happen — The Science, the Psyc...   SAFETY SERIES PLAYLIST:    • Before, During & After | Motorcycle Crash ...   📚 RESEARCH & REFERENCES Morgan, C.A., Doran, A., Steffian, G., Hazlett, G. & Southwick, S.M. (2006). Stress-induced deficits in working memory and visuo-constructive abilities in Special Operations soldiers. Biological Psychiatry, 60(7), 722–729. doi:10.1016/j.biopsych.2006.04.021 Loftus, E.F. (1979). Eyewitness Testimony. Harvard University Press. Wells, G.L. & Olson, E.A. (2003). Eyewitness testimony. Annual Review of Psychology, 54, 277–295. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (2023). Traffic Safety Facts — Motorcycles, 2023 Data. U.S. Department of Transportation. nhtsa.gov/road-safety/motorcycles Bryant, R.A. (2011). Acute stress disorder as a predictor of posttraumatic stress disorder: a systematic review. Journal of Clinical Psychiatry, 72(2), 233–239. doi:10.4088/JCP.09r05072blu Mayou, R., Tyndel, S. & Bryant, B. (1997). Long-term outcome of motor vehicle accident injury. Psychosomatic Medicine, 59(6), 578–584. 🔍 IF YOU'RE SEARCHING FOR: • motorcycle accident what to do • someone crashed their bike • motorcycle crash first aid • should I move a motorcycle accident victim • should I remove the helmet at a crash • crash scene what to do bystander • motorcycle accident shock symptoms • after motorcycle crash checklist 🏍️ ABOUT THIS CHANNEL Luke Watson's Motorcycle & Truck School makes research-based riding education for beginners who want to understand what they're doing — and why. Every video is built on established training frameworks and real-world experience. ~ ~ ~ If you found this video helpful, you can gift LUKE WATSON with a donation or buy him a coffee: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/lukewatson https://donate.stripe.com/dR6dSx1Hj40... ~ ~ ~ #MotorcycleCrash #MotorcycleAccident #ScooterSafety #CrashFirstAid #MotorcycleSafety #EmergencyGuide #SafetySeries #RideSafe #BeginnerRider #WhatToDoAfterACrash © 2026 Luke Watson's Motorcycle & Truck School Instagram: @ianwatsonsschool YouTube: @ianwatsons