When TBI claims are valued, insurers look for evidence that supports both severity and ongoing impact. For many Colton injury victims, the evidence falls into four categories:
1) Medical proof of injury and symptom progression
Even if imaging is normal, documented symptoms can still be critical. What matters is that your medical records consistently connect:
- the mechanism of injury (how it happened)
- diagnoses (e.g., concussion, post-concussion syndrome, etc.)
- symptom evolution over time
- treatment response and functional limitations
2) Treatment continuity (and how to explain interruptions)
In real life, people miss appointments due to scheduling delays, insurance issues, transportation challenges, or work constraints. The difference between a weak and strong claim is whether those gaps are explained and documented appropriately—not whether they magically never happened.
3) Work and commute disruption
Colton residents often work in roles tied to schedules, safety requirements, or physical presence. If your TBI caused missed shifts, reduced productivity, modified duties, or the need to change jobs, those losses should be supported with records such as:
- time records and pay stubs
- employer communications
- work restrictions from clinicians
4) Non-economic harm that affects everyday life
TBI cases commonly involve losses that don’t show up on a bill: impaired concentration, memory problems, irritability, sleep disruption, and difficulty managing normal routines. These impacts can support non-economic damages when they’re reflected in medical notes and (where appropriate) credible witness observations.