Lawndale residents frequently face the same challenge: brain injury symptoms can be subjective, and insurance adjusters may treat them like “complaints” rather than proof of impairment. That’s why claims that succeed typically have a clear paper trail—linking the accident to medical findings and then to functional impact.
In practice, strong TBI case files usually include:
- Emergency and follow-up medical records showing the timeline of symptoms
- Notes from treating providers describing functional limitations (not just diagnoses)
- Evidence of work restrictions and how symptoms affected job performance
- Consistent reporting over time—especially when symptoms fluctuate
If your early records are thin or your symptom history isn’t organized, insurers often argue the injury was minor, short-lived, or unrelated. Your job after an injury is not to “prove everything” alone—it’s to make sure the story is documented clearly enough that it’s credible.


