In a smaller community like Port Neches, many cases share a similar pattern: people return home, go back to work when they can, and assume the injury is “known” because everyone can see the accident details. But with TBI, the most important proof is often clinical and functional, not visual.
After a head injury, symptoms like headaches, dizziness, sleep disruption, memory gaps, irritability, and trouble concentrating may not be obvious to family, coworkers, or even employers. Insurers may focus on:
- whether you sought care promptly
- whether follow-up appointments happened consistently
- whether your reported symptoms match what providers documented
- whether any gaps in treatment can be explained
- how the injury affected your day-to-day abilities, not just the initial diagnosis
The more clearly you connect the accident to the brain injury and its real-world consequences, the stronger the settlement position.


