AI-based calculators typically ask for a handful of inputs—injury type, treatment length, bills, and sometimes a general description of pain or impairment. That can create a “range” quickly.
In North Little Rock, where many families rely on frequent follow-up visits, time-sensitive referrals, and coordinated care between providers, the most important facts are often the ones AI forms don’t capture well—like:
- missed or delayed referrals that affected whether symptoms were caught in time
- documentation gaps after ER visits and subsequent clinic appointments
- medication adjustments that weren’t properly reconciled across providers
- how long it took for someone to receive the right diagnostic testing
A calculator can’t reliably measure those record-based details. In practice, those details help attorneys explain exactly how the standard of care was breached and how that breach led to the harm.


