AI tools typically ask for information like injury type, treatment dates, and whether you had additional procedures or ongoing symptoms. The problem is that malpractice value in real life is usually driven by details that don’t fit neatly into a form.
In a metro Atlanta area like College Park, records can be spread across:
- multiple providers (primary care, specialists, urgent care, hospitals)
- different imaging centers or outpatient facilities
- employer or work-disability paperwork
- follow-up care that happens after you’ve returned home (or had to travel for appointments)
If the calculator doesn’t reflect the actual chart story—what was noted, what was missed, and how clinicians connected the dots—it can produce a misleading range. That’s why the most useful approach is to treat an AI number as “question prompts,” not as a settlement target.


