In many South Florida TBI cases, the hardest part isn’t proving you were hurt—it’s proving how the injury connects to the accident and how it affects your ability to function afterward.
That’s especially true when symptoms are partly invisible. A concussion or other brain injury can produce cognitive and emotional effects that aren’t obvious in the moment. Insurers may argue that complaints are unrelated, exaggerated, or part of normal stress.
That’s why, even if you use AI to estimate ranges, you’ll still need a record that shows:
- A clear timeline from the incident to symptom reporting
- Consistent medical follow-up (primary care, neurology, concussion clinic, therapy)
- Functional limitations tied to real life (work performance, focus, driving safety, household responsibilities)
In Greenacres, where many residents rely on commuting schedules and day-to-day routines, that functional impact can be the difference between a claim that sounds “generic” and one that reflects your real losses.


