Lisa was crossing the street on her way to meet a friend for coffee. She saw the green pedestrian signal and began walking across the intersection.
Within moments, a car entered the intersection and struck her. Lisa was thrown to the ground, hitting her head and suffering serious injuries.
She woke up in hospital, where doctors told her she had suffered a traumatic brain injury, multiple fractures, and spinal injuries. Her treatment plan included spinal fusion surgery and a long period of rehabilitation.
For Lisa, the physical injury was only one part of the situation. She faced weeks in hospital, ongoing therapy, uncertainty about her mobility, and questions about when she could return to ordinary daily activities.
The incident also left her confused. Some people at the scene suggested she may have crossed too late, while the police report did not clearly explain who was at fault.
Pedestrian accidents can involve complex factual questions, especially where traffic lights, timing, visibility, driver behaviour, and witness accounts are involved.
In Lisa’s situation, relevant questions may include:
Fault is not always determined by one statement or one report. The available evidence may need to be reviewed together.
Motor vehicle injury matters may involve different processes depending on the circumstances and the severity of the injury.
A Compulsory Third Party, or CTP, process generally relates to injuries arising from motor vehicle accidents where fault or responsibility may need to be considered.
The National Injury Insurance Scheme Queensland, or NIISQ, is different. NIISQ is a no-fault scheme that may provide necessary and reasonable treatment, care and support for eligible people who sustain serious personal injuries in a motor vehicle accident in Queensland, regardless of who was at fault.
For serious injuries such as traumatic brain injury or spinal injury, both the factual circumstances of the accident and the medical evidence may be important.
After a pedestrian accident, records may help clarify how the incident occurred and how the injuries affected the person involved.
Relevant records may include:
These records may be relevant where there is disagreement about traffic signals, crossing timing, driver behaviour, pedestrian movement, or injury impact.
A pedestrian accident can cause injuries that affect mobility, independence, work capacity, and daily living.
In Lisa’s case, the injuries included traumatic brain injury, multiple fractures, and spinal injury. Treatment and recovery may involve:
Where injuries are serious, medical records can help explain the person’s treatment needs, functional capacity, care requirements, and recovery progress.
A pedestrian accident involving a motor vehicle may involve more than one legal or insurance process.
A CTP process and NIISQ are not the same. A CTP matter may involve questions about fault, liability, injury, and loss. NIISQ is designed to provide treatment, care and support to eligible people with serious personal injuries from Queensland motor vehicle accidents, regardless of fault.
The relevant process depends on the facts of the accident, the injuries sustained, the evidence available, and the applicable legislation.