Many traumatic brain injury (TBI) cases hinge on something less intuitive than diagnosis alone: how consistently the record shows the injury and its effects.
In a suburban community like La Plata, injuries frequently occur in everyday settings—rear-end collisions on commute routes, trips on uneven sidewalks near residential streets, or workplace incidents at local facilities. In each scenario, delays in treatment, gaps in follow-up, or vague symptom descriptions can give adjusters an opening to argue that the symptoms were temporary, unrelated, or exaggerated.
An AI tool may prompt you to list symptoms and treatments, but it can’t replace the kind of evidence that actually persuades decision-makers—especially when cognitive symptoms (brain fog, slowed thinking, concentration problems) may not be obvious to anyone outside medical visits.


