In Baton Rouge, traumatic brain injuries commonly follow incidents where impact and follow-up treatment aren’t always straightforward:
- High-traffic commutes and multi-car crashes (where insurers focus on whose lane, speed, or braking caused the collision)
- Nightlife and event-related incidents (where injuries may be delayed from “feeling off” to documented neurological symptoms)
- Construction and industrial work (falls, equipment incidents, and stress-related symptom overlap)
- Residential and retail slip-and-falls (where hazard notice and maintenance records become central)
The result? Even when a person has a real injury, adjusters may argue the symptoms are unrelated, preexisting, or not serious enough to justify the amount demanded. That’s why a calculator should be treated as a starting point—not the finish line.


