Wisconsin insurance adjusters typically look for a consistent timeline: when symptoms began, how they were treated, what limitations followed, and whether the injury aligns with the accident mechanics.
With traumatic brain injuries, that’s crucial because many symptoms—headaches, dizziness, memory issues, sleep disruption, mood changes—may not be obvious immediately. A claim can be undervalued when the paperwork doesn’t show:
- a prompt medical evaluation after the head impact
- follow-up care that tracks symptom changes
- work restrictions tied to clinician findings
- objective records that support ongoing impairment
A calculator can’t capture that evidentiary “fit.” In West Allis cases, we often focus on building a clean record that connects the accident to the brain injury effects seen in treatment notes.


