People sometimes expect a simple formula like “days hospitalized = payout.” In practice, insurers look for documentation that connects the accident to ongoing brain-injury limitations.
In Lancaster, the cases we see frequently involve:
- High-speed roadway impacts (including rear-end collisions where head movement can be significant)
- Commuter accidents where medical care begins quickly but work restrictions are later disputed
- Multi-vehicle collisions where fault is contested and the injury story is scrutinized
If your treatment records consistently describe concussion symptoms (headaches, dizziness, cognitive slowing, memory problems) and show functional restrictions, your claim is easier to justify. If records are thin, delayed, or inconsistent, settlement value often drops—because the insurer argues the symptoms aren’t severe, weren’t caused by the crash, or improved sooner than you report.


