A traumatic brain injury may be partly invisible. An insurer can see missed work, but they may doubt the neurological effects unless the record shows a consistent story.
In practice, Radcliff-area cases frequently hinge on details like:
- When symptoms began after a crash, slip, or workplace incident (including delayed headaches, dizziness, or brain fog)
- Whether you sought follow-up care rather than only an initial emergency visit
- Whether treatment plans (concussion clinic, neurology, therapy) line up with the symptoms you reported
- How the injury affected work reliability—attendance, concentration, safety-sensitive tasks, and ability to return to prior duties
An AI “calculator” may ask you to input symptoms, but it can’t confirm whether your medical notes, imaging, and follow-up appointments support the same timeline. That’s where legal evaluation matters.


