Mauldin is part suburban, part commuter traffic, and part neighborhood foot-traffic. That mix can create common dispute patterns in head injury cases:
- Short follow-up gaps: People sometimes feel “a little better” and delay appointments. In TBI cases, that can be used to argue the injury wasn’t serious.
- Conflicting accident narratives: Rear-end crashes, lane-change issues, and disputes about right-of-way can shift attention away from the head injury.
- Work attendance pressure: In many industries around the Upstate, missing shifts has real consequences—then insurers argue the TBI must not have caused functional limits.
The fix is not to “talk louder.” It’s to document consistently and connect symptoms to the incident using records, clinician notes, and work evidence.


