In suburban communities like Orland Park, it’s common for people to get checked out after a head injury and then return to work or daily routines—sometimes before symptoms fully stabilize. That timeline matters.
Insurance adjusters frequently look for:
- Consistency between what you reported at the first visit and what later clinicians document
- Whether follow-up care happened when symptoms persisted (headaches, dizziness, concentration problems, sleep disruption, mood changes)
- Objective treatment steps—neurology referrals, therapy, neuropsychological testing, medication management—when they’re medically appropriate
If your early records don’t reflect the full scope of symptoms (or if follow-ups are delayed), the defense may argue the injury was mild, short-lived, or unrelated. The fix is usually not “more paperwork”—it’s a clearer medical and factual record that connects the accident to the ongoing functional impact.


