In suburban communities like Chino, many injuries happen in everyday settings—busy intersections during commute hours, parking lots and storefront walkways, and workplaces where safety procedures may be questioned later.
With TBIs, the challenge is that symptoms can be invisible. Two people can receive the same label (like concussion) but have very different outcomes depending on:
- how quickly symptoms were documented after the incident,
- whether follow-up care continued consistently,
- whether clinicians recorded cognitive and functional effects (not just “patient reports” notes), and
- whether the medical record ties your symptoms to the accident with believable causation.
That’s why an AI tool may appear to “estimate” value, but it can’t reliably confirm whether your medical proof will persuade an adjuster or a judge.


