AI tools typically generate a range based on the information you enter. That can offer quick clarity, particularly if you’re dealing with a diagnosis that came too late or a complication that required extra treatment.
But a calculator can’t reliably account for details that matter a lot in real Illinois cases, such as:
- How quickly symptoms were escalating while you were trying to keep up with work or caregiving.
- Gaps between appointments (common when scheduling delays affect follow-up care).
- Documentation quality—whether the medical record shows the timeline clearly enough to support causation.
- Functional impact (for example, whether you can return to the same job duties, not just whether you “recovered”).
In other words, the math may be plausible, but the evidence determines what a claim can actually prove.


