Oklahoma City sees plenty of traffic at peak commute hours, plus year-round events that bring higher pedestrian activity downtown and near venues. That mix can increase the chances of:
- Rear-end and multi-car collisions on major corridors (where whiplash and concussion symptoms can be delayed)
- Intersection crashes involving sudden braking and impact
- Pedestrian and crosswalk injuries where witnesses may be limited
- Construction-zone incidents that lead to disputes over traffic control, maintenance, and warning signs
For traumatic brain injury cases, the complication usually isn’t that the injury “can’t happen.” It’s that insurers may argue the symptoms are unrelated, exaggerated, or inconsistent—especially if there’s a gap between the incident and follow-up care.


