Unlike some injuries that are obvious immediately, traumatic brain injuries can be subtle at first. In Brockton, claims commonly arise from situations where the impact mechanics matter—how the head struck, the force involved, and what symptoms appeared right away.
Examples we see in MA include:
- Rear-end and stop-and-go crashes on commuter routes, where whiplash and head impact may be disputed.
- Pedestrian and crosswalk incidents where witnesses may notice confusion or “not acting right,” but medical details arrive later.
- Worksite incidents (construction, warehouses, industrial settings) where reporting timing and documentation can affect causation.
- Trips and falls in retail stores and multi-unit buildings, where the “severity” of the fall becomes a later argument.
Insurance teams frequently challenge TBI claims by focusing on whether the head injury truly occurred the way you say it did—and whether later symptoms are consistent with that mechanism.


