TBI symptoms can be invisible. In Lackawanna, that matters because many cases involve people who need to keep working around tight schedules—driving to shifts, managing caregiving, or commuting through heavier traffic periods. If treatment is delayed, symptoms fluctuate, or paperwork is scattered, it becomes easier for an insurer to argue that the injury is less severe—or that something else is driving the symptoms.
That’s why AI-style tools should be treated as a checklist, not a valuation. They can help you identify what’s missing, such as:
- emergency room documentation of impact, confusion/dizziness, or loss of consciousness (if documented)
- follow-up visits with neurology, concussion clinics, or primary care
- a symptom timeline that matches medical notes
- records tying cognitive complaints to functional changes (work performance, concentration, driving safety)
In New York, the strength of a personal injury claim still depends on evidence. A “brain injury label” alone rarely controls outcomes.


