People often start with tools that promise instant guidance—then realize they still need answers like:
- What evidence matters for my medication and timeline?
- How do I document side effects without missing key records?
- Who may be responsible: the manufacturer, the prescriber’s warnings, or something else?
AI tools can be useful for organizing thoughts, drafting questions, or building a timeline. They can’t verify medical causation, interpret labeling and warning histories in context, or evaluate how Kentucky courts and insurance practices tend to treat these cases. That’s where a lawyer steps in—using the same “speed and clarity” goal, but with real-world accountability.


