🌦️ WEATHER
🏛️ Warsaw ☀️ 36°C 8 km/h
🐉 Kraków ☀️ 38°C 10 km/h
🌉 Wrocław ☀️ 38°C 11 km/h
Gdańsk ☁️ 35°C 11 km/h
Updated 13:31

Serious Salomea-Wolica crash near Warsaw

A 72-year-old woman was struck after leaving her Mercedes in a Salomea-Wolica crash; she was airlifted in critical condition. Read safety and expat advice.

Serious accident on the Trasa Salomea-Wolica left a 72-year-old woman critically injured. The Salomea-Wolica crash occurred near Opacz-Kolonia in Pruszków County at about 15:49. Emergency teams rushed to the scene immediately.

What happened at the scene

Authorities say a woman stopped her Mercedes on the emergency lane. Consequently, she left the vehicle and walked beside it. However, an Iveco delivery van struck her moments later. Paramedics performed resuscitation on site. Therefore the medics stabilized her and called the air ambulance. In addition, the crew airlifted her to a Warsaw hospital in critical condition with revived vital signs.

Police response and initial findings

Police cordoned the road and halted traffic toward the city center. As a result, drivers faced major delays in both directions. Investigators tested the van driver for alcohol. Moreover, preliminary results showed he was sober. The police will now reconstruct the sequence of events. They plan to interview witnesses and check CCTV footage from the viaduct above Nowa Street.

Salomea-Wolica crash: why this matters for commuters

Trasa Salomea-Wolica serves as a busy arterial link between western Warsaw suburbs and the city. Therefore the route handles heavy commuter and commercial traffic daily. Consequently, a single incident can cause long tailbacks. In addition, emergency closures often shift traffic onto smaller streets. Drivers should expect delays and choose alternative routes. Moreover public transport services may slow or reroute to avoid the area.

💡 GOOD TO KNOW: If you witness or become involved in an accident in Poland, call 112 immediately. Emergency services will dispatch police, ambulance (NFZ) and sometimes the air ambulance (LPR). For urgent hospital care, hospitals treat you regardless of residency. However, long-term inpatient care or non-urgent procedures usually require proof of insurance or a PESEL number for access to state coverage (NFZ). Therefore carry travel insurance or an EHIC if you are from the EU. Moreover contact your embassy and your insurer quickly. Do not leave injured people alone at the scene, and avoid exiting your vehicle on high-speed roads unless you face a clear danger.

Healthcare in Poland uses the NFZ public system for insured residents. However private clinics operate widely. Consequently many expats buy private medical insurance. In addition many hospitals use the PESEL as a patient identifier for administrative procedures. Therefore if you plan to live long-term, register for a PESEL where possible.

Authorities remind drivers that stopping on an emergency lane carries legal risk. Police may issue fines for improper stopping. Moreover pedestrians on express routes risk serious harm. Therefore always seek a safe place to stop and call for help if you have a breakdown.

Traffic investigators will publish more facts as they verify witness statements and technical data. Meanwhile police advise drivers to avoid the area and follow detours.

Source: Read original article

📚 Looking for more help settling in Poland? Browse our complete Expat Guides.

Don't miss a beat!

Get the most important local Polish news delivered to your inbox. No noise, just the facts.

No spam. Unsubscribe anytime..

Terms of Service

Poland Radar

Poland Radar is an independent English-language news portal covering local Polish news and expat life in Poland. Our editorial team monitors Polish media daily to deliver relevant, accessible news for the international community living in Poland. We cover breaking news, safety alerts, legal updates and practical guides for expats across Warsaw, Kraków, Wrocław and beyond.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *