A traumatic brain injury can cause symptoms that are real but not always obvious—headaches, dizziness, memory problems, sleep disruption, and mood changes. In a settlement, insurers tend to focus less on what you feel and more on what can be documented.
In Socorro, many claims arise from everyday life: commuting patterns, school drop-offs, errands, and shift work. That means medical records and work history often become the backbone of the case. If your documentation clearly connects the accident to ongoing symptoms and functional limits, the value usually has a stronger foundation.
If the record is thin—missed appointments, inconsistent symptom reporting, or gaps in treatment—the other side may argue the injury wasn’t as serious or didn’t last.


