In smaller, suburban communities like Burlington, many accidents happen close to home—commutes, school runs, quick errands, and routine shifts. That can make it harder to prove the full impact of a brain injury, because symptoms are often invisible and can fluctuate.
An AI tool may ask for inputs like concussion severity, treatment duration, and symptom categories. But the real question insurers ask is simpler: What did the record show at the time, and how consistently did you follow through afterward?
That’s why two people with the same diagnosis can see very different outcomes:
- One has emergency documentation, follow-up notes, and a clear symptom timeline.
- The other has gaps, delayed reporting, or records that don’t clearly connect the incident to cognitive or neurological changes.
For Burlington residents, the practical takeaway is straightforward: if you’re building a claim, your file needs more than a diagnosis—it needs a coherent story supported by providers, dates, and functional observations.


