In a smaller Texas community, it’s common for injured people to keep working (or trying to), because medical bills and daily responsibilities don’t pause. That can create a familiar problem in TBI cases: symptoms are real, but the record doesn’t always show a clean, continuous timeline.
An AI tool may generate an estimate based on the injury label—yet adjusters typically focus on:
- When symptoms showed up (immediate vs. delayed)
- Whether follow-up care happened promptly
- Whether providers documented cognitive effects (not just “feels worse”)
- How the injury changed real-world functioning—driving, work performance, and safety
In Kilgore, where many people commute regularly and rely on routine, insurers often argue that symptoms “must not be severe” if the person kept up normal activities. Your lawyer’s job is to show the difference between “showing up” and maintaining full capacity.


