AI tools usually work by taking the details you enter—like the type of injury, treatment timeline, and reported losses—and applying simplified compensation assumptions.
For many people, that creates an immediate emotional benefit: it offers structure when everything feels uncertain.
The problem is that medical malpractice value is not determined by injury alone. In Brentwood cases, settlement discussions rise and fall based on proof of:
- Breach of the standard of care (what a reasonably careful provider should have done)
- Causation (that the negligence—not something else—caused the harm)
- Documented damages (past bills and future impacts supported by records)
An AI calculator can’t reliably confirm those elements. If you treat its output like a promise or target, you can accidentally undervalue your case—or accept an early offer that doesn’t reflect the full evidence.


