Traumatic brain injury claims aren’t evaluated from the injury label alone. Adjusters usually focus on whether the incident actually caused the neurological symptoms and whether the medical record shows a consistent story from the day of the crash or fall.
In Dripping Springs, that often plays out in familiar scenarios:
- Commuter collisions and highway cut-throughs: Symptoms after a head impact can seem minor at first, then evolve over days—especially with missed follow-up care.
- Tourism and weekend activity: Visitors and seasonal workers may have delayed reporting or incomplete incident details, complicating causation.
- Residential slip-and-fall situations: Uneven sidewalks, poorly lit steps, and weather-related hazards can lead to head injuries where the “what happened” timeline is later disputed.
When you’re dealing with dizziness, headaches, concentration problems, mood changes, or memory issues, it’s easy for key facts to get lost. That’s where a structured approach—human-led and evidence-based—matters more than a guess.


