Think of an AI tool as a worksheet—not an attorney. In a Lawton context, it can be useful for:
- Sorting potential damage categories you may need to document (past bills, future care, lost income, and non-economic impacts like pain and mental anguish).
- Identifying missing information you’ll want to gather early (operative reports, medication lists, imaging, discharge summaries, and follow-up notes).
- Getting a rough range that may help you ask better questions during a consultation.
But AI outputs can mislead when the facts are complex—especially in cases involving missed symptoms, delayed referral, medication mismanagement, or complications that unfold over time.
Why the “range” may not fit your case in Oklahoma
Oklahoma malpractice evaluations depend heavily on medical proof and causation. A calculator can’t confirm whether a provider violated the accepted standard of care, whether that breach caused your specific injuries, or whether later treatment broke the chain of causation. Those are evidence-driven determinations, not math problems.


