Kingsburg residents often deal with a mix of common injury situations—short commutes that still involve high-speed merges, longer days on their feet, and workplaces where hazards can be overlooked. These environments can create delays between the moment of impact and the documentation insurers expect.
Two things make TBI valuations tricky in practice:
- Concussion and brain injury symptoms may be invisible at first. Headaches, dizziness, memory issues, sleep disruption, and mood changes can show up later or fluctuate.
- Insurers focus on consistency. If treatment is delayed, symptoms evolve without explanation, or work restrictions aren’t documented, adjusters may argue the injury wasn’t as serious or wasn’t caused by the incident.
A “rough range” tool can’t weigh those proof issues the way a claim review does.


