AI tools typically generate a rough range based on inputs like injury severity, age, and general categories of damages. That can be useful if you’re trying to understand which parts of a spinal injury claim tend to drive money—like long-term treatment, assistive technology, and daily assistance.
However, insurers in Idaho do not settle based on a worksheet alone. They focus on your actual documented neurological status, the consistency of the medical timeline, and whether your providers can support future needs with credible recommendations.
In Blackfoot, that usually means your case will rise or fall on details like:
- whether early emergency and follow-up findings match the story of the incident,
- whether imaging and functional testing are captured clearly,
- whether the record supports the level of assistance you truly require.
If your inputs were incomplete or your prognosis isn’t documented in a way that a claims adjuster can rely on, an AI output may overestimate or underestimate what a settlement should reflect.


