In the Sunrise area, many crashes and slip-and-falls involve commuters, rideshare drivers, and frequent stop-and-go travel. That context matters because early reports often become the “anchor” insurers use later.
After a TBI, symptoms can be delayed or misunderstood—headache and dizziness may start immediately, while concentration problems, emotional changes, or sleep disruption can emerge over days or weeks. If the record looks inconsistent, an adjuster may argue symptoms weren’t caused by the accident.
That’s where a calculator can mislead: it might assume a clean timeline. Real cases rarely unfold that neatly. The strongest claims are built around:
- When symptoms were first documented (not just when you noticed them)
- Whether follow-up care happened as symptoms evolved
- How consistently providers recorded cognitive/neurological effects
- Whether your treatment plan matched the symptoms


