Instead of focusing on a generic formula, plan around the proof adjusters and attorneys care about.
1) Medical records tied to the incident timeline
A calculator can’t know whether your symptoms were reported right away, whether they were tracked over time, or whether clinicians linked your complaints to the mechanism of injury. In Andrews, where many residents commute long distances and return to demanding work quickly, the timeline is often the difference between “a concussion” and a compensable injury with ongoing restrictions.
2) Work and daily-function documentation
For many Andrews residents, the practical question is: Can you still perform the job and life tasks you had before?
Evidence that tends to matter includes:
- Work status notes and restrictions from treating providers
- Employer letters, time records, or documentation of reduced duties
- Proof of missed shifts, overtime loss, or inability to perform safety-sensitive functions
3) Objective findings plus consistent symptom reporting
Not every concussion shows dramatic imaging. That doesn’t automatically reduce value. What strengthens a claim is consistent reporting—headaches, concentration problems, dizziness, sleep disturbance—and medical follow-through that tracks those symptoms.
4) Accident documentation (especially for roadway and commuting incidents)
In Texas, liability disputes can turn on details like lane position, speed, traffic control, and witness credibility. In Andrews-area crashes, it’s common for insurance companies to argue fault or minimize causation. Police reports, witness statements, photos, and any available video can help anchor what happened.