Most people don’t need a “math” tool first—they need a case timeline. For Billings residents, that timeline often begins with:
- Emergency care records after an accident (ER notes, CT/MRI results if done, vitals, discharge instructions)
- Follow-up visits with providers who document cognitive and neurologic symptoms over time
- Work and activity impact tied to the way symptoms show up in daily life (sleep disruption, concentration problems, headaches, dizziness, mood changes)
Why this matters: insurers often treat early documentation as more persuasive than later recollections. If you waited to seek care or your symptoms weren’t consistently recorded, it can become harder to argue the injury was caused by the Billings accident—not something else.


