Milledgeville residents deal with real-world traffic patterns—commutes on two-lane roads, school-zone travel, and day-to-day driving that can turn routine moments into sudden collisions. In many traumatic brain injury (TBI) cases, the outcome turns on the same facts:
- What happened at the moment of impact (speed, angle, head contact, seatbelt use)
- When symptoms started (immediately vs. later that day or the next day)
- Whether the injury “matches the story” in the medical record
Even when someone suffers a concussion or more serious TBI, insurers may question whether the symptoms were caused by the crash or incident—especially if documentation is thin. That’s why local claims often require a tight timeline supported by medical notes.


