An AI tool typically generates a range based on simplified categories like medical bills, recovery time, and injury severity. That can be a useful starting point.
In real New Jersey cases, however, the outcome often hinges on details that a form won’t capture—especially when care is fragmented across providers. In Edgewater, it’s common for people to see multiple clinicians (primary care, emergency evaluation, imaging, specialists) in a short window. When records aren’t consistently connected—who ordered what, what test results showed, when follow-up should have happened—defense teams may argue the harm can’t be linked to the alleged negligence.
That’s why an AI estimate should be treated like a checklist, not a forecast.


