Many traumatic brain injury cases don’t look serious in the first hours. In real life, someone may be evaluated after a collision, fall, or workplace accident and then notice changes later—headaches that worsen, memory problems, sleep disruption, irritability, or trouble concentrating.
For Coweta residents, common patterns include:
- Rear-end and stop-and-go crashes during evening commutes, where the initial symptom story may be incomplete.
- Construction and industrial work environments, where head impacts can be underreported at first or documented inconsistently.
- Property-related incidents near stores and service areas, where the timeline of symptoms doesn’t always match the timeline of the accident report.
That mismatch is exactly what insurers look for. A “calculator” can’t fix it, but the right legal strategy can—by building a clear, evidence-supported timeline.


