In and around Kerman, many head-injury cases come from situations like:
- Commuting and traffic collisions on local roads where sudden braking or lane changes can lead to head impacts
- Pedestrian or crosswalk incidents near busier corridors where drivers and witnesses may have limited time to react
- Commercial worksite injuries involving machinery, falls from equipment, or being struck by objects
- Construction-related hazards and vehicle traffic mixing near active work zones
In these cases, insurers frequently focus on two questions:
- Did the accident actually cause the brain injury symptoms?
- Are the symptoms documented in a way that matches how the injury occurred?
That’s why “proof of impact” matters. It’s not just the diagnosis—it’s the chain of documentation connecting the incident to the neurological effects and the functional limits that followed.


