After a spinal cord injury, it’s normal to want a number. It feels like control: a way to translate medical chaos into something measurable.
AI tools typically generate a range by using general injury categories and simplified inputs. That can be useful for understanding what tends to drive value—like lifetime care, mobility needs, and ongoing treatment.
But in real Fayetteville cases, the settlement outcome depends heavily on what the record shows about:
- Neurological function (what’s affected now and what may change)
- Complications (skin breakdown risk, respiratory issues, bowel/bladder involvement)
- The cause story (what happened, what evidence exists, and how consistent it is)
- Liability defenses insurers raise under Georgia practice
An AI result shouldn’t be treated as a promise. Think of it as a starting point for building a case that can survive insurer scrutiny.


