AI tools typically ask for inputs like injury severity, age, and care needs, then generate a generalized range. That can be useful for planning questions for your attorney—but it can also mislead you when your case hinges on details that a calculator can’t see.
In Tustin, those details often appear in the environment and timing of the incident and the way it’s documented:
- Traffic patterns and impact dynamics: Rear-end collisions and lane-change crashes can produce different injury mechanisms than low-speed impacts.
- Delay between symptoms and diagnosis: In some cases, neurological symptoms emerge after the initial emergency visit, making medical timeline documentation critical.
- Local medical decision-making: Prognosis in California spinal injury matters relies on records that reflect functional status and follow-up recommendations—not just a diagnosis code.
A calculator won’t review imaging, neurological exams, or your functional limitations. That’s why the “number” can feel confident while the evidence behind it is missing.


