An AI tool can help you organize details, but for Taylorville residents the most important “input” isn’t a diagnosis label—it’s the sequence of events.
After a traumatic brain injury, insurers frequently focus on questions like:
- When did symptoms begin (right away or days later)?
- Did you seek emergency care or follow up promptly?
- Did you keep attending appointments even when you were “getting better”?
- Are there records tying ongoing symptoms to the incident?
Local reality: if your injury happened around commuting routes, a busy intersection, or a workplace schedule, delays in treatment can create gaps. Those gaps can be used to argue that symptoms were unrelated or less severe.
What to do now: collect dates and documents in one place—ER visit notes, follow-up visits, medication history, therapy plans, and any work restrictions. This is the foundation your lawyer will use to evaluate value (and to challenge unfair “AI estimate” reasoning).


