Injury claims involving concussions and more serious brain trauma are frequently shaped by one practical issue: whether medical care followed the incident quickly enough to document causation. In Plainfield, that can play out in a few common ways:
- Commuter and traffic collisions: Head symptoms may be delayed or described inconsistently if the injured person returns to routine activities before being evaluated.
- Pedestrian and curb-related incidents: Confusion, dizziness, or balance problems can be overlooked at the scene—then later become the basis for a dispute about severity.
- Store, office, and residential falls: People sometimes “walk it off,” then struggle with headaches, sleep disruption, or memory issues days later.
A calculator can’t know whether the record shows prompt reporting, prompt evaluation, and consistent follow-up. In New Jersey, that documentation matters because it helps connect the incident to the neurological symptoms you’re claiming.


