Injury adjusters frequently look for consistency between three things:
- What happened (accident reports, witness accounts, event timelines)
- What you said happened to you (symptom reporting over time)
- What providers documented (diagnoses, treatment notes, functional limitations)
Because Shelton residents may return to work or daily routines while still experiencing cognitive or emotional after-effects, it’s common for claims to be challenged with arguments like: “You must be fine,” “the symptoms don’t match the mechanism,” or “there’s no objective evidence.”
A strong TBI case doesn’t require dramatic scans in every situation. It requires organized medical documentation showing symptoms and functional impact, tied to the accident.


