AI tools typically work by using simplified inputs (injury type, length of treatment, reported losses) to produce a range. In practice, Waynesboro cases often hinge on details that don’t fit neatly into a form, such as:
- Whether the provider documented symptoms accurately during the crucial early visits
- Whether follow-up occurred as clinically indicated (and how quickly)
- Whether diagnostic results were interpreted correctly and communicated to you
- Whether your records show a consistent timeline between care and the worsening condition
AI can’t read the chart the way a medical expert would. It also can’t evaluate how Virginia law treats negligence and causation—so you should treat an AI output as a starting point, not a target.


