An AI tool typically uses the information you enter—injury type, treatment timeline, severity, and sometimes recovery duration—to generate an educational damage range.
That’s helpful when you’re trying to understand what categories often matter, such as:
- Past medical expenses (ER visits, imaging, surgeries, therapy)
- Future medical needs (ongoing care, medications, assistive treatment)
- Lost income tied to work limitations and time missed
- Non-economic impacts like pain, reduced functioning, and emotional distress
What it can’t do: it can’t verify whether the care you received in your specific timeline met Pennsylvania’s standard of care, or whether the medical evidence supports causation—two issues that often determine whether a claim gains traction.
Also, AI can’t “see” the details that frequently decide Pennsylvania cases, including how records were documented, whether providers recognized complications, and whether follow-up steps were appropriate.


