Traumatic brain injury claims—especially concussions—can be hard to value when symptoms are partly subjective (headaches, brain fog, dizziness, sleep disruption, mood changes) and partly hard to measure. In Fairmont, that often shows up in common real-life timelines:
- Commute interruptions after a wreck on regional routes
- Missed shifts when concentration and reaction time don’t bounce back quickly
- Delayed symptom reporting because initial effects felt “mild”
- Return-to-work pressure when employers want people back before symptoms are stable
- Safety concerns for residents who drive frequently for school, appointments, or caregiving
That’s why the strongest claims tend to be the ones with a clear record: what happened, what you reported, what clinicians observed, and how your functioning changed over time.


