In medical negligence cases, the biggest driver of settlement value is rarely the injury label—it’s the documented chain of events.
AI tools typically ask you to describe what went wrong and then apply simplified assumptions about damages. That can be helpful for orientation, but it often misses details that matter in Illinois cases, such as:
- Whether symptoms were documented at the right time (and whether follow-up was properly arranged)
- Whether test results were communicated and acted on promptly
- Whether the care team’s actions matched what a reasonably careful provider would do under similar circumstances
- Whether the injury worsened after a specific failure (not just that it existed)
In Sycamore, residents may juggle commuting, work shifts, and child care—so documentation gaps can happen when appointments are delayed or records are incomplete. If the timeline is fuzzy, AI estimates may undervalue your claim or suggest you “should’ve gotten better sooner,” even when the medical record tells a different story.


