Traumatic brain injuries can be invisible. In practice, insurers frequently focus less on the label (“concussion,” “TBI,” “brain injury”) and more on whether the record shows:
- A clear timeline from the Lebanon incident (crash, fall, workplace event) to symptoms
- Consistency between what you reported and what clinicians documented
- Functional impact—how symptoms affected driving, job duties, household responsibilities, and daily cognition
That matters because Oregon claims are decided based on evidence of fault/causation and damages, not just the severity of the diagnosis. An AI tool can’t authenticate your medical history, reconcile gaps, or interpret conflicting findings the way a legal team can.


