An AI tool can generate a rough range quickly. That’s useful when you’re trying to answer questions like:
- “What categories of losses might matter in my situation?”
- “How do people typically evaluate medical bills versus long-term impact?”
- “What evidence should I start gathering right now?”
But in Texas—especially when care involves multiple facilities—your outcome depends on details that a form can’t reliably capture. AI can’t review the actual chart, imaging, medication history, or the sequence of clinical decisions that attorneys and medical experts focus on.


