Berkeley’s dense streets and active pedestrian areas mean head injuries can occur in many ways—vehicle and bicycle collisions, rideshare drop-offs, slip-and-fall events near storefronts, and even incidents around campus-area foot traffic. What’s consistent is this: insurers frequently scrutinize the timeline.
If symptoms weren’t documented quickly, adjusters may argue the injury was mild, unrelated, or short-lived. If you were evaluated early but later notes are inconsistent—or treatment gaps exist without explanation—defense attorneys may try to narrow the case.
That’s why an AI-style tool should be treated as a checklist, not a valuation. It can help you organize facts, but it can’t confirm what Berkeley investigators, doctors, and adjusters will rely on:
- When you first sought care
- Whether symptoms were recorded consistently (not just later recalled)
- How clinicians described cognitive and behavioral changes
- Whether follow-up treatment matched the severity of complaints


