After a brain injury, people commonly feel “fine” at first—or they delay care because headaches, dizziness, and memory problems seem manageable. Unfortunately, insurers frequently look for the same things: how soon you were evaluated, how consistently symptoms were described, and whether follow-up care happened.
In Wauwatosa, that can be complicated by real life—work schedules, transportation, childcare, and the fact that symptoms can fluctuate. The key is to build a record that shows your injury was real, treated appropriately, and functionally limiting.
What tends to help most:
- Emergency or urgent care notes that capture symptoms soon after the incident
- Follow-up appointments with clinicians familiar with concussion/TBI recovery
- Clear descriptions of how the injury affects daily tasks (not just “pain,” but cognition, sleep, mood, and concentration)


