Many AI tools are built on simplified inputs (injury severity, recovery length, and bills). That approach struggles with issues that show up frequently in suburban Alabama communities, including:
- Care that spans multiple providers. One visit in Montgomery-area clinics may be followed by imaging, specialist review, and then hospital treatment. If the tool can’t “see” that continuity, it can understate or overstate causation.
- Delayed escalation after symptoms. Residents may change providers quickly, wait to “see if it improves,” or rely on advice that later turns out to be incomplete. Online tools don’t weigh those communication and follow-up gaps the way lawyers and medical experts do.
- Complications that emerge after discharge. A complication may become obvious days later—often when the patient is managing work, family, and commuting. Calculators may not fully account for how the harm evolved after the last documented appointment.
Bottom line: an estimate can help you understand categories of damages, but it can’t replace a file review of the medical timeline.


