Injuries to the brain don’t always show up in a single scan the way broken bones do. In West Haven, people commonly report symptoms after:
- car or truck crashes during commuting and shift changes
- pedestrian accidents in higher-traffic crosswalk areas
- slip-and-fall incidents in retail and office settings
- workplace incidents involving equipment, ladders, or falling objects
The pattern we see is consistent: when the claim is later reviewed, insurers look for a tight connection between the incident, the symptoms, and the treatment you followed.
If your records show a clear timeline—ER/urgent care evaluation, follow-up appointments, therapy or specialist visits, and work or activity restrictions—your case is easier to value. If records are scattered or symptoms were delayed, minimized, or described inconsistently, adjusters often argue the injury isn’t as serious or wasn’t caused by the event.


