After a traumatic brain injury (TBI), symptoms can be invisible. Someone may look fine at the grocery store, but still struggle with concentration, headaches, or mood changes at home the next day. That mismatch is exactly what insurers look for.
In Glen Cove, common real-world scenarios include:
- Commuter traffic and intersection collisions where whiplash and head impacts overlap (and the defense argues symptoms are unrelated or overstated).
- Slip-and-fall incidents linked to weather conditions, uneven walkways, or maintenance delays.
- Visitor-related hazards during peak seasons (more foot traffic, more crowding, and more disagreements about what caused the fall).
- Workplace incidents where safety reporting is incomplete or delayed, especially when an injury is first described as “dizziness” or “just sore.”
Because of these dynamics, your case typically depends on whether your records show a consistent story: what happened, when symptoms started, what providers observed, and what treatment followed.


