AI-based calculators typically use the same basic categories people think about after a serious medical outcome:
- medical bills and treatment costs
- time lost from work
- long-term limitations or ongoing care needs
- non-economic harm (pain, suffering, reduced quality of life)
For someone in Lower Burrell, that can be psychologically useful—especially if you’re trying to understand whether you’re looking at “one bad week” or something that will ripple for years.
Still, the biggest limitation is simple: most tools can’t measure the facts that Pennsylvania juries and adjusters actually rely on—medical causation, standard-of-care proof, and the credibility of the documentation.


