Online tools may ask you to plug in symptoms and diagnoses and then spit out a range. In real TBI cases, especially here in the Scranton–Wilkes-Barre area where commuting, construction, and mixed traffic are common, the outcome hinges on details that generic calculators can’t reliably capture—like:
- How quickly you sought care after the incident (and whether that record shows a consistent story)
- Whether your symptoms fit the mechanism of injury described in emergency notes
- What your follow-up care shows—not just that you were injured, but how your brain injury affected function over time
- Whether the at-fault party’s conduct is provable (police report facts, witness accounts, surveillance, documentation)
A calculator can be a starting point for organizing questions. It can’t replace the evidence review needed to support causation and damages.


