In Edmond, many crashes happen around commuter corridors, intersections, and workday traffic—places where people may not realize they’ve been injured until days or weeks later. With traumatic brain injuries, symptoms can evolve, and that evolution can become the difference between a low offer and a fair settlement.
Insurance adjusters tend to focus on two things:
- What the medical records show (diagnosis, symptom reports, treatment, and follow-up)
- How your life changed in measurable ways (missed work, restrictions, inability to perform job duties safely, impacts on parenting, driving, and daily functioning)
That’s why a “settlement estimate” should be built around documentation—not just an injury label. Your goal is to show the connection between the collision, the brain injury, and the functional consequences.


