In suburban communities like Clawson, traumatic brain injuries commonly occur in incidents that don’t always look dramatic at first—rear-end traffic collisions during commute hours, trips on uneven sidewalks, or workplace accidents where the event is documented but the injury’s impact grows over time.
That matters because insurers often argue one of two points:
- Your symptoms didn’t start when you said they did, or
- Your ongoing symptoms point to something else.
If your headaches, dizziness, sleep disruption, or cognitive “slowness” started after the incident but your records are inconsistent, your claim can be undervalued even when the injury is real.
Practical takeaway: in Clawson, the most important “calculator input” is usually not the diagnosis label—it’s the consistency between the incident date, symptom onset, and treatment history.


