Many people start with general internet information or a “legal bot” style assistant. That can be helpful for orientation, but it can’t evaluate your specific facts—especially where causation and documentation are central.
In Alachua, we frequently see the same practical issue: families must coordinate care while also managing records from multiple doctors, labs, and (sometimes) different states. Without a structured intake and evidence plan, it’s easy to miss key documents or create an inconsistent story that insurers challenge.
A lawyer’s job is to turn scattered records into a case theory that can withstand scrutiny.


