A TBI can involve both obvious symptoms (like headaches) and less visible effects (like slowed thinking, irritability, or memory gaps). In practice, insurers in Washington frequently scrutinize whether symptoms were:
- reported consistently,
- treated promptly,
- and documented with enough detail to connect them to the incident.
That’s especially important when your daily life changes quickly—missed shifts at work, delayed appointments, trouble concentrating while driving, or difficulty keeping up with family responsibilities.
An AI tool can help you organize questions (What treatment did I miss? What did I report first?), but it can’t validate whether your medical record supports causation or how your limitations affected real-world functioning.


