Traumatic brain injuries (TBIs) range from mild concussions to severe, permanently disabling injuries that require lifetime care. Whether your TBI resulted from a car crash, fall, sports injury, or assault, the long-term medical, vocational, and quality-of-life impacts must be fully accounted for in your claim. Gregory S. Young Co., LPA works with neurologists, neuropsychologists, life care planners, and vocational experts to capture every cost — present and future.
How We Help You
- Working with neurological and neuropsychological experts to document the full extent of injury
- Developing life care plans that capture future medical, therapeutic, and support costs
- Retaining vocational rehabilitation experts to calculate lost earning capacity
- Documenting cognitive, emotional, and behavioral changes from TBI
- Fighting for damages beyond insurance policy limits when injuries are catastrophic
- Handling cases resulting from car accidents, falls, medical errors, and assaults
What To Do After Your Injury
- Get Neurological Evaluation
TBI symptoms — headaches, cognitive fog, mood changes, memory problems — may not appear immediately. A formal neurological evaluation creates the medical foundation for your claim.
- Document All Symptoms
Keep a daily journal of symptoms, cognitive difficulties, sleep disruptions, and how TBI affects your daily activities and relationships.
- Do Not Minimize Your Injury
'It's just a concussion' is the most expensive phrase in TBI cases. Even mild TBI can have lasting consequences.
- Call Us Early
TBI cases require extensive expert preparation. The sooner we start, the better we can document the progression of your symptoms.
Injured? Talk to a Traumatic Brain Injury Attorneys Today
Free consultations are available around the clock. No upfront costs — we only get paid when you do.
- No fee unless we win
- Free consultations 24/7
- Serving Ohio & Kentucky since 1958
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between a mild TBI and a severe TBI?
'Mild' TBI (including concussion) can still cause significant long-term symptoms — chronic headaches, cognitive impairment, personality changes, and post-traumatic stress disorder. Severity classification does not determine the value of your legal claim.
How are TBI damages calculated in Ohio?
TBI damages include past and future medical expenses, lost wages and reduced earning capacity, costs of future care, pain and suffering, and loss of enjoyment of life. For severe TBI, lifetime care costs can exceed several million dollars.