When adjusters evaluate a potential settlement for a traumatic brain injury, they’re usually trying to answer two questions:
- How severe was the injury at each stage?
- How consistently does the evidence show it was caused by the incident?
In practice, that often means looking closely at:
- Emergency and follow-up records (not just an initial visit)
- Objective findings when available (imaging, neuro testing, clinical assessments)
- Whether your symptoms affected real life—work duties, driving, household responsibilities, sleep, cognition, or mood
- Treatment adherence and documentation of gaps (including reasons you couldn’t attend)
Because traumatic brain injuries can involve symptoms that fluctuate, the strongest cases in Virginia are the ones that show a clear timeline—what happened, when symptoms began, how they changed, and what care was pursued.


