AI tools typically try to approximate damages by using information you type in—injury severity, treatment duration, medical expenses, and sometimes non-economic impacts like pain and suffering.
That can be useful for understanding categories of damages. It does not replace what Maryland insurers and attorneys focus on: whether the medical care fell below the accepted standard and whether that breach caused your outcome.
In practice, two people can enter the same “calculator inputs” yet face very different results because the documents don’t carry the same weight—especially when the timeline of symptom changes, follow-up decisions, and diagnostic reasoning is in dispute.


