An AI tool can produce a rough range by taking the details you enter—like injury severity, treatment length, and out-of-pocket costs—and then applying simplified assumptions.
The problem is that malpractice cases in MS often turn on evidence that an online form can’t capture well, such as:
- whether the provider documented key symptoms and decision points,
- whether follow-up was timely when conditions worsened,
- how clinicians explained causation in the chart,
- whether expert review supports that the negligence—not something else—caused the harm.
In Brookhaven, people may initially seek care at one clinic or hospital, then follow with another provider for imaging, surgery, or therapy. AI tools typically don’t account for gaps between providers, incomplete histories, or missing records that can become central to liability and damages later.


