After an adverse reaction, many people turn to online tools—sometimes described as AI medication claim assistants or “dangerous drug” chatbots—because they want answers immediately. In Monroe, that urgency is common: people may be trying to understand symptoms while juggling time off work, pharmacy visits, and follow-up appointments.
But online tools can’t:
- confirm how your specific prescription and dosage relate to your symptoms,
- verify which warnings applied at the time you were prescribed,
- or evaluate what evidence a North Carolina court (or settlement negotiation) will actually require.
The best use of AI-style guidance is as a starting point to organize facts—not as a substitute for a lawyer’s evidence strategy.


