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Boynton Beach Brain Injury Lawyer — Serious Representation for Life-Altering Injuries in Palm Beach County

A traumatic brain injury changes everything. In a single moment — a rear-end collision on I-95, a fall on a construction site along Congress Avenue, a slip on a wet floor at a Boynton Beach retailer — the trajectory of a person’s life can shift permanently. TBI survivors often face years of rehabilitation, cognitive therapy, and long-term care. Families absorb costs that run well into the millions. And because TBI symptoms can be invisible to the naked eye, insurance companies routinely dispute, minimize, and deny these claims with particular aggression.

Wolf & Pravato’s Boynton Beach brain injury lawyers understand the full scope of what a TBI claim requires: sophisticated medical evidence, neuropsychological testimony, life care planning, and the courtroom experience to take on insurers who would rather litigate than pay. We represent TBI survivors and their families throughout Palm Beach County, and we do not collect a fee unless we win.

Need Immediate Legal Guidance? Contact our Boynton Beach office and reach our team 24/7 at (844) 643-7200. We are located at 1375 Gateway Blvd., Boynton Beach, FL 33426.

What Is a Traumatic Brain Injury? Medical and Legal Framework

A traumatic brain injury (TBI) occurs when an external force disrupts normal brain function — whether through a direct blow to the head, a violent jolt, or an object penetrating the skull. The term covers a wide spectrum of severity, and understanding where a specific injury falls on that spectrum is foundational to building a successful legal claim.

TBI Classification: The Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS)

Physicians classify TBI severity using the Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS), a standardized neurological assessment that scores eye response, verbal response, and motor response on a scale of 3 to 15. The three clinical categories are:

  • Mild TBI (GCS 13–15): Often called a concussion. The patient may lose consciousness briefly or not at all. Symptoms — headache, memory gaps, irritability, difficulty concentrating — can persist for weeks or months in a condition known as post-concussion syndrome. Mild TBI is the most litigated category because insurers frequently argue the injury is not serious or is pre-existing.
  • Moderate TBI (GCS 9–12): Loss of consciousness lasting from 30 minutes to 24 hours. CT or MRI imaging typically shows abnormalities. Patients commonly experience lasting cognitive and physical impairments requiring formal rehabilitation.
  • Severe TBI (GCS 3–8): Extended unconsciousness or coma. Severe TBI often results in permanent disability, persistent vegetative state, or death. Life care costs for severe TBI survivors routinely exceed $3 million over a lifetime.

Key TBI Mechanisms Relevant to Boynton Beach Injury Cases

The mechanism of injury matters legally because it determines how fault is established and how medical evidence is presented. Common TBI mechanisms we handle include:

  • Coup-contrecoup injury: The brain strikes the inside of the skull at the point of impact (coup) and then rebounds to strike the opposite side (contrecoup), creating damage at two locations simultaneously. This pattern is common in motor vehicle accidents on I-95 and SR-804 and is often visible on MRI imaging.
  • Diffuse Axonal Injury (DAI): Caused by rapid acceleration-deceleration forces that stretch and tear the brain’s nerve fibers (axons) across widespread areas. DAI may not appear on standard CT scans — only specialized MRI sequences or DTI (diffusion tensor imaging) may detect it — which is why insurers commonly argue the injury doesn’t exist. We work with neuroradiologists who specialize in detecting DAI.
  • Subdural hematoma: Bleeding between the brain and its outer covering (dura mater), often caused by head impact. Can be acute (immediate) or chronic (developing over days or weeks), which is why delayed diagnosis is common.
  • Epidural hematoma: Arterial bleeding between the skull and dura, typically associated with skull fractures. A medical emergency — patients can experience a “lucid interval” where they appear normal before a rapid neurological decline.
  • Penetrating TBI: An object — shrapnel, construction debris, glass — enters the skull. Common in workplace accidents on Palm Beach County construction sites.

Common Causes of Traumatic Brain Injury in Boynton Beach

Boynton Beach’s geography and demographics create specific TBI risk patterns that our attorneys have handled extensively. The city’s position at the intersection of I-95, Congress Avenue, and the Florida Turnpike makes it one of the busiest traffic corridors in Palm Beach County — and motor vehicle accidents remain the leading cause of TBI in Florida.

Motor Vehicle Accidents

Vehicle crashes — including car accidents, truck accidents, motorcycle crashes, and pedestrian knockdowns — cause the majority of TBI claims we handle in Boynton Beach. High-speed rear-end collisions produce the coup-contrecoup and DAI patterns described above. Motorcycle crashes, even with helmet use, carry an elevated TBI risk. Pedestrian accidents on Congress Avenue and Boynton Beach Boulevard are a particular concern given traffic volumes. If a commercial vehicle, rideshare driver, or government vehicle was involved, additional liability theories and insurance layers apply.

Slip, Trip, and Fall Accidents

Falls are the second leading cause of TBI nationally and a major source of claims in Palm Beach County’s retail, hospitality, and senior care sectors. A fall onto a hard floor — whether in a grocery store, hotel lobby, or assisted living facility — can produce a severe TBI even in a person who appears to recover quickly. Florida’s premises liability law (and the modified comparative fault standard under §768.81 F.S. post-HB 837) governs these claims.

Construction Site Accidents

Palm Beach County’s sustained construction boom means falling object strikes, scaffold collapses, and equipment accidents are a consistent source of TBI claims. Construction TBI cases often involve multiple liable parties — general contractors, subcontractors, property owners, and equipment manufacturers — and may support both a workers’ compensation claim and a parallel third-party personal injury lawsuit. Wolf & Pravato handles both tracks simultaneously.

Defective Products

Helmets that fail on impact, airbags that deploy incorrectly or not at all, and industrial equipment that malfunctions can all cause TBI through product liability. These cases require engineering experts and accident reconstruction in addition to the standard medical evidence.

Assault and Intentional Violence

TBI from assault or battery creates both a criminal matter and a civil personal injury claim against the attacker. In some cases — particularly in commercial settings like bars, parking structures, or retail environments — a negligent security claim against the property owner is available in addition to a claim against the individual assailant.

Why TBI Cases Are Different From Other Personal Injury Claims

Traumatic brain injury cases are among the most complex and most contested in personal injury law. Several factors distinguish them from a standard car accident or slip-and-fall claim:

Invisible Injuries and Delayed Diagnosis

The most dangerous aspect of TBI from a legal standpoint is that the injury is often invisible in the immediate aftermath. A patient discharged from a Boynton Beach emergency room with a “normal” CT scan may still have a significant mild TBI or undetected DAI. Symptoms — personality changes, memory problems, chronic headache, depression, difficulty at work — may develop or worsen over days, weeks, or months. By the time the full picture is clear, the insurance company has already taken a recorded statement from the victim, who may have described themselves as “fine” or “a little sore.”

Our attorneys advise all potential TBI clients: do not give a recorded statement to any insurance adjuster without legal counsel. The insurer’s goal is to minimize your claim before your injury is fully documented.

Long-Term and Lifetime Damages

A mild TBI may resolve in weeks. A severe TBI can mean a lifetime of medical care, residential support, cognitive therapy, lost earning capacity, and family caregiving costs. Calculating these damages accurately is not a task for a general-practice attorney — it requires a professional Life Care Planner (LCP), a credentialed expert who projects the full scope of future medical and support needs over the claimant’s life expectancy. We retain experienced LCPs on all significant TBI cases and present their findings as evidence in litigation and settlement negotiations.

The Insurance Company’s Playbook Against TBI Claims

Insurers have well-developed strategies to contest TBI claims, particularly mild and moderate TBI:

  • Demanding an Independent Medical Examination (IME) by a physician they hire and pay — whose opinions reliably favor the insurer
  • Commissioning neuropsychological testing designed to produce findings that minimize cognitive deficits
  • Arguing that symptoms are psychological (“somatoform”), not neurological
  • Mining the claimant’s social media for photos or posts that suggest normal activity
  • Challenging the mechanism of injury (arguing a low-speed collision cannot cause TBI)
  • Asserting a pre-existing condition (prior headaches, prior concussion, prior anxiety) is responsible for the current symptoms

Our attorneys have defended TBI clients against all of these tactics. We work with neuropsychologists, neuroradiologists, biomechanical engineers, and life care planners to build a case that holds up against carrier scrutiny at every stage.

Legal Expertise You Can Trust

Handling the “invisible” nature of brain injuries requires more than just a lawyer—it requires a specialist. This guide and our firm’s litigation strategy are overseen by Richard P. Pravato, a founding partner and Florida Bar Board Certified Civil Trial Attorney. This elite certification is held by less than 1% of Florida lawyers, identifying Richard as a verified expert in the eyes of the court. Since 1996, he has specialized in complex TBI litigation, helping Wolf & Pravato recover over $200 million for the injured. A member of the Million Dollar Advocates Forum, Richard ensures every case we handle meets the highest standards of medical and legal advocacy.

Compensation Available in a Boynton Beach Brain Injury Case

Compensation Available in a Boynton Beach Brain Injury Case

Florida’s personal injury system allows TBI victims to recover both economic and non-economic damages. The full measure of compensation in a serious TBI case often far exceeds what the at-fault party’s insurance carrier initially offers — which is why legal representation matters enormously.

Economic Damages

  • Past medical expenses: Emergency treatment, hospitalization, neurosurgery, ICU care, imaging, rehabilitation
  • Future medical expenses: Ongoing neurological care, cognitive rehabilitation, medication, assistive devices — calculated by a Life Care Planner over the victim’s projected life expectancy
  • Lost wages: Income lost from the time of injury through recovery or maximum medical improvement
  • Loss of future earning capacity: If TBI permanently reduces the victim’s ability to work, the present value of that lost earning capacity is recoverable — typically calculated by a vocational rehabilitation expert and economist
  • Home modification costs: Wheelchair ramps, grab bars, bedroom conversions for victims with physical impairments
  • In-home care and attendant services: Professional caregiving costs if the TBI victim cannot live independently

Non-Economic Damages

  • Pain and suffering: Physical pain from the injury and ongoing symptoms
  • Mental anguish and emotional distress: Depression, anxiety, PTSD — common TBI sequelae that are compensable
  • Loss of enjoyment of life: Inability to engage in activities, hobbies, and relationships that defined the victim’s life before injury
  • Loss of consortium: Damages to the spouse or partner for loss of companionship, support, and intimacy

Florida’s 2023 tort reform (HB 837) modified the comparative fault framework under §768.81 F.S. Under the new pure comparative negligence rule replaced by a modified comparative fault standard, a plaintiff who is found more than 50% at fault for their own injuries cannot recover damages. This change underscores the importance of thorough liability investigation at the outset of every TBI case. Our attorneys conduct early scene investigation, obtain surveillance footage, and secure witness statements before evidence disappears.

How Wolf & Pravato Builds a Traumatic Brain Injury Case

Building a winning TBI case requires assembling a multidisciplinary team of experts and a litigation strategy that anticipates the insurer’s defenses. Here is how we approach every significant TBI claim:

  1. Immediate evidence preservation: We issue litigation hold letters, subpoena surveillance footage, photograph vehicle damage and accident scenes, and secure black box data from commercial vehicles — all before this evidence is lost or destroyed.
  2. Medical record review and neurological consultation: We obtain and analyze all medical records, then consult with board-certified neurologists and neuroradiologists to fully document the TBI, its mechanism, and its prognosis.
  3. Neuropsychological evaluation: For moderate and severe TBI clients, we arrange a comprehensive neuropsychological evaluation to objectively measure cognitive deficits — memory, processing speed, executive function, and behavioral changes — that will form the foundation of our damages presentation.
  4. Life Care Planning: A certified Life Care Planner (LCP) evaluates the client’s long-term needs and produces a detailed projection of future medical, rehabilitative, and support costs over the client’s life expectancy. This document is one of the most powerful tools in TBI litigation.
  5. Vocational rehabilitation and economic analysis: For working-age clients, a vocational expert assesses lost earning capacity. A forensic economist calculates the present value of future losses. Both are often essential at trial.
  6. IME defense: If the carrier demands an Independent Medical Examination, we prepare the client thoroughly, attend the examination where permitted, and engage our own experts to challenge any IME report that minimizes the injury.
  7. Settlement negotiation or litigation: Most TBI cases settle in mediation. When insurers refuse to offer fair value, Wolf & Pravato takes cases to trial before Palm Beach County juries in the 15th Judicial Circuit.

Florida’s Statute of Limitations for Brain Injury Claims — Updated for 2023

Florida HB 837, signed into law on March 24, 2023, reduced the statute of limitations for negligence-based personal injury claims from 4 years to 2 years under §95.11(3)(a) F.S. This is one of the most significant changes to Florida tort law in decades and directly affects TBI victims and their families.

  • Injuries occurring on or after March 24, 2023: You have 2 years from the date of the injury to file a lawsuit.
  • Injuries occurring before March 24, 2023: The prior 4-year limitations period still applies.
  • Wrongful death claims: The statute of limitations for wrongful death is 2 years from the date of death under §95.11(4)(d) F.S. — this was not changed by HB 837 but is equally unforgiving.
  • The discovery rule: For TBI cases involving delayed diagnosis, the limitations period may be tolled (paused) until the date the injury was discovered or reasonably should have been discovered. This exception is narrow and contested — do not rely on it without speaking to an attorney.

Two years sounds like a long time. It is not. TBI cases require months of medical documentation, expert retention, and investigation before a lawsuit can be properly filed. Waiting until the deadline approaches significantly compromises your case. Contact Wolf & Pravato as soon as possible after a brain injury — the earlier we begin, the stronger your claim.

Waiting until the deadline approaches can compromise your case. Contact Wolf & Pravato immediately at (844) 643-7200.

When a Traumatic Brain Injury Is Fatal: Wrongful Death Claims in Florida

Severe TBI is a leading cause of injury-related death in Florida. When a brain injury caused by another’s negligence proves fatal, the victim’s family may bring a wrongful death claim under Florida’s Wrongful Death Act (§§768.16–768.26 F.S.). This is a separate legal action from a personal injury claim and must be brought by the deceased’s personal representative on behalf of the estate and survivors.

Under the Florida Wrongful Death Act, recoverable damages include:

  • Surviving spouse: Loss of companionship and protection, mental pain and suffering
  • Minor children: Loss of parental companionship, instruction, and guidance; mental pain and suffering
  • Adult children (if no surviving spouse): Mental pain and suffering in cases of parental death
  • Parents of a deceased minor child: Mental pain and suffering
  • Estate: Lost net accumulations (future earnings the deceased would have saved), medical and funeral expenses

Florida’s wrongful death statute is complex — who can recover and what they can recover has been the subject of significant litigation. HB 837 also modified certain wrongful death provisions. If you have lost a family member to a TBI caused by someone else’s negligence, call our firm immediately. The 2-year statute of limitations runs from the date of death, and building a wrongful death case takes time.

Why Choose Wolf & Pravato as Your Boynton Beach Brain Injury Lawyer?

There is no shortage of personal injury law firms in South Florida, but Wolf & Pravato provides the level of personal attention, legal experience, and trial readiness that many high-volume firms cannot offer. Our attorneys are licensed to practice law in Florida and have decades of combined experience representing victims of traumatic brain injuries throughout Palm Beach County and across South Florida.

Brain injury cases are often complex and may involve long-term medical care, neurological evaluations, rehabilitation, and expert testimony. Injuries such as concussions, traumatic brain injuries (TBI), skull fractures, and oxygen deprivation can have lasting physical, cognitive, and emotional effects. Our legal team carefully investigates every case, works with medical specialists and life-care planners, and fights to hold negligent drivers, property owners, and insurance companies accountable.

We pursue compensation for medical expenses, lost income, future care, pain and suffering, and the long-term impact that brain injuries can have on a victim’s life and family.

Licensed and Verified Legal Representation

Experienced Florida personal injury attorney Richard Paul Pravato, a member in good standing with The Florida Bar since 1996, leads Wolf & Pravato. Attorney licensing and credentials can be verified through the official Florida Bar profile:

https://www.floridabar.org/mybarprofile/86150

Richard Pravato is also a Board Certified Civil Trial Attorney, a distinction awarded by The Florida Bar to attorneys who demonstrate exceptional knowledge, skill, and professionalism in civil trial law. This certification reflects our firm’s commitment to high-level advocacy in serious injury cases, including traumatic brain injury litigation.

When insurance companies dispute the severity of a brain injury or attempt to minimize compensation, having a board-certified trial lawyer on your side can make a significant difference in the outcome of your case.

What Our Clients Say About Us

“Brian and Vernae and Mr Pravato all did an excellent job handling my case in a timely manner! They also kept me informed and fought until the end! Brian was very informative!! The whole team, I couldn’t have asked for a better firm! HIGHLY RECOMMENDED.”

— Ja Morant

“Back in February I had an unfortunate accident and needed legal help. Jayne handled my case and she was amazing. I never had to guess what was happening because she always kept me updated by phone and email. The insurance and medical billing issues became complicated, but Wolf & Pravato fought for me every step of the way. They refused to let the insurance company take advantage of me, and we won. I highly recommend them to anyone who needs a personal injury attorney. They were fast, fair, and kept me informed throughout the entire process.”

— Madison Pando

Reference: https://share.google/vIaFmIWLh3vVcy1op

Contact Our Boynton Beach Brain Injury Lawyers — Free Consultation

If you or a family member has suffered a traumatic brain injury in Boynton Beach or anywhere in Palm Beach County, time is not on your side. The statute of limitations is now 2 years for injuries occurring after March 24, 2023. Evidence disappears. Insurance adjusters begin building their defense from the moment of the accident.

Wolf & Pravato offers a free, confidential consultation. We will review your case, explain your rights, and tell you honestly what your claim is worth. There is no fee unless we recover for you.

Law Offices of Wolf & Pravato Address:

1375 Gateway Blvd., Boynton Beach, FL 33426

Local Phone: 833-370-8692
Toll-Free: (844) 643-7200 Available 24/7

Frequently Asked Questions: Boynton Beach Brain Injury Cases

  1. How do I know if I have a TBI if my CT scan was normal?
    A normal CT scan does not rule out TBI. CT imaging is effective at detecting bleeding and fractures but may miss diffuse axonal injury (DAI), mild TBI, and many contusions. Advanced MRI sequences, including diffusion tensor imaging (DTI), are more sensitive. If your CT was normal but you have persistent symptoms — headaches, memory problems, difficulty concentrating, mood changes, sleep disturbance — you may still have a significant TBI. Get a follow-up evaluation with a neurologist, and contact our office before speaking to any insurance adjuster.
  2. How long does a brain injury lawsuit take in Florida?
    Most TBI cases that settle without trial resolve within 12 to 24 months. Cases that proceed to trial in Palm Beach County’s 15th Judicial Circuit can take 2 to 4 years or more. The timeline depends on the severity of the injury (we typically wait until the client reaches maximum medical improvement before settling), the insurer’s willingness to negotiate fairly, and court scheduling. We keep clients informed at every stage and are always honest about realistic timelines.
  3. What is a Life Care Plan and why does it matter in my TBI case?
    A Life Care Plan (LCP) is a comprehensive document prepared by a certified Life Care Planner that projects all of a TBI victim’s future medical, rehabilitative, therapeutic, and support needs — and their associated costs — over the victim’s projected life expectancy. For moderate and severe TBI cases, the LCP often identifies millions of dollars in future care costs that would otherwise be omitted from the settlement calculation. Without an LCP, victims routinely accept settlements that seem large but fall catastrophically short of their actual lifetime needs.
  4. The insurance company offered me a settlement quickly — should I accept?
    No — not without legal review. Quick settlement offers after a TBI are almost always low-ball figures designed to close your claim before the full extent of your injury is documented. Once you sign a release, you cannot reopen the claim regardless of how your condition worsens. Call our office before accepting or signing anything. The consultation is free.
  5. Can I file a claim for a concussion or mild TBI?
    Yes. Mild TBI (concussion) claims are valid and can involve significant damages, particularly if you experience post-concussion syndrome — a condition where symptoms persist beyond the expected recovery window and interfere with work, relationships, and daily life. These claims are aggressively contested by insurers. An attorney experienced with mild TBI litigation is essential to documenting and presenting these cases effectively.
  6. What if the person who caused my injury doesn’t have enough insurance?
    Several options may be available. If you were injured in a vehicle accident, your own underinsured/uninsured motorist (UM/UIM) coverage may apply. If a third party contributed to the accident (a property owner, employer, or equipment manufacturer), their insurance may be available. In some cases, the defendant’s personal assets may be reachable through a judgment. We identify every available insurance layer and source of recovery in every TBI case we handle.
  7. What happens if I was partially at fault for my brain injury?
    Under Florida’s modified comparative fault standard (post-HB 837, §768.81 F.S.), if you are found 50% or less at fault, your damages are reduced proportionally by your percentage of fault. If you are found more than 50% at fault, you cannot recover. This makes early liability investigation critical — we gather evidence before it disappears to build the strongest possible liability case on your behalf.
  8. Can a family member bring a claim if their loved one with a TBI cannot manage their own affairs?
    Yes. If a TBI victim is incapacitated, a guardian or personal representative can pursue the claim on their behalf. Florida courts can appoint a guardian ad litem or a legal guardian to manage litigation for an incapacitated person. Wolf & Pravato has experience navigating the intersection of TBI litigation and Florida guardianship law.

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