TBI cases often turn on the gap between what can be seen and what can’t. Headaches, dizziness, memory problems, trouble concentrating, sleep disruption, and mood changes are real—but they can be easy for an adjuster to minimize if they don’t appear clearly and consistently in the record.
In Pasco, many injury claims arise from situations where liability can quickly become contested—such as:
- Commuter traffic and high-speed crashes on regional roadways
- Pedestrian or cyclist impacts where reporting may be incomplete
- Construction and warehouse-area accidents where documentation is sometimes delayed
- Property incidents involving lighting, maintenance, or warning issues
Because of that, your settlement value usually depends less on the label “TBI” and more on whether your evidence shows:
- the injury mechanism (how the impact happened),
- the medical findings and symptom timeline,
- the functional impact (work, daily activities, relationships), and
- the treatment pattern (what you did and why).


