In small cities and suburban communities like Eden, people commonly return to work, family routines, or normal schedules sooner than they should—sometimes because appointments are hard to get, symptoms come and go, or they’re trying to “push through.”
For traumatic brain injury claims, that pattern can create a problem: insurers often look for consistency between the accident date, your reported symptoms, and the treatment you received.
That means the “settlement story” is usually built from:
- Emergency and follow-up records (not just one visit)
- Provider notes describing functional impact (focus, memory, sleep, headaches, dizziness, mood)
- Work documentation (restrictions, missed shifts, reduced performance)
- A clear timeline showing how symptoms evolved
When that evidence is organized, settlement discussions tend to move faster and with less resistance.


