Ivins is a growing community, and many injury events here involve everyday realities: commutes, weekend travel, school-zone traffic, drivers unfamiliar with local routes, and distracted driving around popular destinations. When a traumatic brain injury happens in those circumstances, the settlement value usually turns on evidence that connects the crash or incident to the brain injury symptoms.
An AI tool may generate a number based on broad categories. But in real cases, adjusters often focus on questions like:
- Was there a clear timeline from the incident to the onset of headaches, dizziness, memory issues, or concentration problems?
- Do treatment notes consistently describe neurological symptoms (not just “feeling off”)?
- Are there records showing the injury impacted work, parenting responsibilities, or daily functioning?
- Does the accident evidence support fault and causation (police report, witness statements, photos, vehicle damage, etc.)?
That’s why residents often search for a “calculator”—but still need legal evaluation to translate their real-world impact into a claim that stands up to scrutiny.


