In Grand Haven, traumatic brain injuries commonly occur in settings where people are moving fast and paying attention to more than one thing at once—locals, tourists, cyclists, and pedestrians share the road and paths. That mix can make investigations take longer, and it can affect how insurers argue causation.
Common Grand Haven scenarios include:
- Tourist-season traffic crashes (rear-end collisions, sudden braking, and lane changes near busy corridors)
- Pedestrian and crosswalk incidents around high-foot-traffic areas
- Bike and e-scooter collisions on mixed-use routes
- Slip-and-fall injuries in public-facing locations during weather changes and seasonal maintenance
- Construction-zone impacts where signage, lane control, or surface conditions are disputed
Even when fault feels obvious, traumatic brain injury cases often hinge on whether the medical record supports that the incident caused the neurological symptoms—and whether those symptoms stayed consistent over time.


