In many Oswego cases, the dispute isn’t whether a person suffered a head injury—it’s how the injury is tied to the incident and how long the effects lasted.
That matters when:
- Symptoms are invisible at first (headaches, dizziness, concentration problems, sleep disruption)
- Recovery is seasonal or interrupted (missed appointments because of work, travel, weather, or caregiving)
- An insurer argues the symptoms were caused by something else (stress, migraine history, or unrelated conditions)
An AI tool may generate a range based on inputs like “concussion” and “treatment duration.” In practice, New York adjusters and attorneys focus on whether the record shows a consistent timeline—especially when the injury is linked to commuting incidents, parking lots, or slip-and-fall hazards that can be hard to reconstruct later.


