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Eye Injury from Accident Claims

An eye injury can affect work, driving, reading, and everyday confidence. Where an eye injury happens in an accident and the surrounding circumstances point to an avoidable safety failure, it can be sensible to get clear legal advice on what steps are available.

  • Independent medical expert evidence where required
  • Clear written costs information before you proceed
  • Strict time limits apply. Early advice is important
  • Clinical negligence claims are generally outside the Injuries Resolution Board process
The Dublin Solicitors Bar AssociationCivil Litigation Law Firm of the Year, WinnerLaw Society of Ireland, Practising SolicitorsAVMA, Action against medical accidents

An eye injury can affect work, driving, reading, and everyday confidence. Where an eye injury happens in an accident and the surrounding circumstances point to an avoidable safety failure, it can be sensible to get clear legal advice on what steps are available. Michael Boylan Litigation is a specialist litigation firm. We approach eye injury accident matters with careful fact-finding, medical insight, and an evidence-led focus, while keeping advice practical and easy to follow. Your first priority should always be proper medical assessment and follow-up.

What counts as an eye injury after an accident

Eye injuries are not all the same. Some are short-lived and treatable. Others involve deeper damage, longer recovery, or lasting change in vision. The categories below are common after accidents.

  • Surface injuries (scratches and corneal abrasions): Damage to the cornea, the clear front surface of the eye. Often causes sharp pain, watering, light sensitivity, and the feeling that something is in the eye.

  • Chemical exposure and burns: Splashes from cleaning products, industrial chemicals, cement, or solvents can injure the eye quickly. These incidents are treated as time-critical medical emergencies.

  • Impact trauma: A blow to the eye or surrounding bone can cause bruising, swelling, internal bleeding, or damage to delicate structures inside the eye.

  • Penetrating injuries and foreign bodies: Where an object enters the eye or where debris becomes lodged in the eye. This can happen with metal fragments, wood splinters, shattered glass, or sharp plastics.

  • Vision disturbance and partial sight loss: Blurred vision, double vision, reduced peripheral vision, or loss of part of the visual field. Even when the eye looks normal, a change in vision can indicate a serious internal injury.

How eye injuries happen in accidents

Eye trauma is often linked to a predictable set of accident settings. Understanding the setting helps identify what evidence may exist and what safety measures were expected.

  • Workplace accidents: Grinding, cutting, drilling, welding, chemical handling, pressurised hoses, and tasks involving dust or debris. Risks can rise where eye protection is missing, unsuitable, or not enforced.

  • Road traffic accidents: Impact with an airbag, shattered glass, dashboard contact, or secondary trauma from facial injuries.

  • Accidents in public places: Falls, collisions, defective fixtures, poorly maintained surfaces, or unexpected hazards at shops, premises, and shared areas.

  • Sports and leisure accidents: Contact sports, racquet sports, equestrian activities, cycling incidents, and injuries from equipment or projectiles.

Eye injuries caused by medical negligence are different. Instead of an accident scene, the focus is usually on clinical decision-making and treatment, such as a missed diagnosis, a delay in referral, or an injury during a procedure. Medical negligence claims also follow a different route in Ireland, and they are commonly evidence-heavy. If that may apply, see our Medical Negligence Solicitors and Accident & Emergency Claims pages.

Common causes of eye injuries

In many accident scenarios, the immediate cause is straightforward. The legal question, where relevant, is often whether the risk was reasonably controllable and whether appropriate precautions were in place.

  • Flying particles and debris: Metal fragments, stone chips, dust, wood splinters, and plastics, particularly from tools or machinery.

  • Chemical splashes and fumes: Cleaning agents, cement, fertilisers, solvents, and industrial liquids, including splash-back during pouring or mixing.

  • Defective or unsuitable protective eyewear: Poor fit, scratched lenses, incorrect grade of protection, or missing side shields for the task.

  • Blunt force contact: Impact from a tool, box, door, sports ball, or elbow, including collisions in crowded environments.

  • Falls and secondary impact: A fall that leads to facial contact with flooring, shelving, railings, or protruding fixtures.

  • Shattered glass and sharp edges: Breakage during an incident, or contact with damaged materials, including glassware and window panels.

  • Poor visibility and signage issues: Low lighting, unclear warnings, or unmarked hazards that contribute to a collision or fall.

Injuries and impacts commonly associated with eye trauma

Eye trauma is rarely only about the eye itself. Symptoms can evolve, treatment can involve multiple appointments, and the knock-on effects can be disruptive even when the injury is not permanent.

  • Pain, irritation, and watering: Often persistent in corneal injuries and foreign body cases.

  • Light sensitivity and headaches: Common after surface damage or inflammation, and may limit screen use and driving.

  • Blurred or distorted vision: May indicate swelling, internal bleeding, retinal involvement, or nerve-related issues.

  • Difficulty working safely: Especially in roles requiring precision, machinery operation, driving, or night work.

  • Treatment burden: Multiple reviews, eye drops, imaging, and specialist appointments with ophthalmology.

  • Increased infection risk: Particularly where the cornea is damaged or a foreign body is involved.

  • Psychological impact: Anxiety around vision change, reduced confidence outdoors, or fear of re-injury, especially after a frightening incident.

What to do after an eye injury in an accident

The immediate steps you take can protect your health and also help ensure that the key facts are not lost. Keep the focus on treatment first, then documentation.

  • Seek medical attention and follow-up (including Eye Casualty or ophthalmology where appropriate): If there is chemical exposure, something embedded, severe pain, or any vision change, treat it as urgent. Some eye emergency departments require referral routes, so check local requirements.

  • Report the incident and ensure it is recorded: In work settings, ensure there is a formal entry and that the location, time, task, and equipment involved are captured accurately.

  • Preserve evidence early (photos, PPE or equipment identifiers, CCTV requests): Take clear photos of the scene, lighting, hazards, and any relevant signage. Note PPE brand and model, machine identifiers, and request that CCTV is retained quickly.

  • Keep a symptom and treatment timeline: Record when symptoms started, how they changed, what treatment was provided, and what follow-up was arranged. This can matter where symptoms are delayed or evolve over time.

When a serious accident is not necessarily negligence

Not every serious outcome means there was negligence. Some activities carry known and accepted risks, even where everyone acts carefully. The key distinction is usually between inherent risk and an avoidable safety failure.

Negligence issues typically arise where the evidence suggests that a person or organisation failed to take reasonable care, such as failing to implement a safe system of work, ignoring a known hazard, providing inadequate protective equipment, failing to maintain equipment, or allowing unsafe conditions to continue. The assessment is fact-specific, and it often turns on what precautions were reasonable in the circumstances and what documentation exists to confirm them.

The process in Ireland

Every matter turns on its facts, but eye injury accident claims in Ireland often follow a recognisable sequence:

  • Initial case review: Clarifying the circumstances, identifying the relevant parties, and confirming what evidence exists.

  • Evidence collection: Medical records, incident reports, CCTV requests, photographs, witness details, and any safety documentation.

  • Medical assessment: Understanding diagnosis, prognosis, and what ongoing treatment is recommended.

  • Injuries Resolution Board stage (where applicable): Most personal injury claims (other than medical negligence) generally go through the Injuries Resolution Board in the first instance.

  • Next procedural step: Depending on how the matter progresses, this can include further investigation, exchanges of evidence, or court proceedings where required.

Time limits for eye injury accident claims in Ireland

In Ireland, there is generally a two-year time limit for personal injury actions, and in some situations the clock runs from the date of knowledge. In plain terms, the date of knowledge is when you first knew, or could reasonably have known, that you had a significant injury connected to the incident. The legal basis is set out in the Civil Liability and Courts Act 2004, section 7.

Common exceptions and special situations can include:

  • Minors: Different rules apply where the injured person is under 18.

  • Capacity and decision-support issues: Where a person cannot manage their affairs, limitation issues can be more complex.

  • Delayed knowledge scenarios: Where symptoms develop later or the seriousness only becomes clear after medical review.

Where the position is unclear, it can help to get advice early so that the time-limit position is understood without added stress.

Evidence that is often relied on

Eye injury cases often stand or fall on detail. The most useful evidence is usually the evidence gathered early.

  • Medical records: Emergency department notes, GP records, optometry notes, ophthalmology reports, imaging results, and prescriptions.

  • Incident documentation: Workplace accident reports, internal investigation notes, safety statements, risk assessments, maintenance logs, and training records.

  • Photographs and video: Images of the scene, lighting, signage, debris, chemicals, and the condition of PPE. CCTV footage, dashcam footage, or phone video where available.

  • Witness information: Names and contact details of anyone who saw the incident or the conditions immediately before and after.

  • Equipment evidence: Details of machinery, tools, chemicals (including labels and safety data sheets where relevant), and protective eyewear specifications.

  • Proof of practical impact: A clear record of how the injury affected work duties, driving, daily tasks, and the need for follow-up appointments.

Why Michael Boylan Litigation?

Specialist litigation focus

Michael Boylan Litigation is a specialist litigation firm with a long-standing focus on complex injury and negligence disputes. Where an eye injury raises questions around safety standards, responsibility, and medical evidence, an experienced litigation approach can be important.

Evidence-led case preparation

Eye injury cases often require careful handling of medical detail, including ophthalmology input and a structured approach to records. Michael Boylan Litigation’s focus is on early evidence preservation, clear case analysis, and practical guidance so that you understand the process and what is likely to be needed at each stage.

FAQs

What should I do immediately after an eye injury at work?

Start with medical care. Even if the injury looks minor, an eye assessment can be important because some problems worsen over time.

  • Get assessed: If there is pain, light sensitivity, watering, or blurred vision, seek medical attention promptly.

  • Report it: Ensure there is a formal workplace record with the time, location, task, and equipment.

  • Keep the practical details: Note what PPE was provided and whether it was being used, including brand and model.

  • Preserve evidence early: Photos and CCTV requests should be made as soon as possible.

What if chemicals got into my eye during work?

Treat chemical exposure as urgent. The priority is to reduce harm and get specialist care where needed.

  • Start rinsing immediately: Use clean running water and keep the eyelids open while rinsing, following on-site first aid procedures.

  • Remove contact lenses if possible: Only if it can be done safely while rinsing continues.

  • Bring chemical details: Keep the container or take a photo of the label, and request the safety data sheet if available.

  • Get medical assessment: Chemical injuries can have delayed effects, even if the eye feels better initially.

What if my symptoms appeared hours or days later?

That can happen with eye injuries, particularly with corneal abrasions, inflammation, and some chemical exposures.

  • Arrange a review: If symptoms appear later, seek medical assessment and follow-up.

  • Write down the timeline: Note when symptoms began, how they changed, and what treatment you received.

  • Do not assume it will settle: Vision changes or persistent discomfort should be checked.

What if there is no CCTV or the footage was not retained?

A case can still be assessed. CCTV is useful, but it is not the only way to establish what happened.

  • Witness evidence: Statements from colleagues, bystanders, or supervisors can be important.

  • Contemporaneous records: Accident reports, maintenance logs, and safety documents can show what conditions were like.

  • Photographs: Even photos taken shortly after can help show hazards, lighting, debris, or signage.

Can agency workers bring an eye injury claim in Ireland?

Agency workers can still have legal rights where an eye injury occurs in the course of work. Responsibility can depend on the practical arrangements, including who controlled the work, who provided training, and who provided PPE. In some situations, more than one party may be relevant, and the starting point is usually a careful review of the working arrangement and incident records.

What if I was partly at fault?

In some cases, responsibility may be shared. That does not automatically prevent a claim, but it can affect how responsibility is assessed. A fact-specific review of the evidence is usually needed, including training, signage, PPE, supervision, and what was reasonably foreseeable in the circumstances.

What happens if responsibility is disputed?

If responsibility is not accepted, the focus typically moves to evidence. That can include witness statements, documentation, technical evidence where relevant, and medical material. Where disputes remain, formal legal steps may be required. The important point is that disputes are addressed through structured case preparation, not assumptions.

Can more than one party be responsible?

Yes. Depending on the circumstances, responsibility can involve multiple parties, such as an employer and a contractor, or an occupier and a maintenance provider. Where that may be relevant, the evidence usually needs to identify who controlled the risk and who had responsibility for the safety measures.

Contact us

If you have suffered an eye injury in an accident and you would like to understand whether the circumstances raise legal issues, what information matters, and how the Irish process works in practice, you can contact Michael Boylan Litigation. The team will listen carefully to what happened, explain the steps in plain English, and outline what evidence is typically needed so you can make informed decisions from the outset.

*In contentious business, a solicitor may not calculate fees or other charges as a percentage or proportion of any award or settlement.

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