AI tools usually work like a “damage range” guess based on inputs such as injury severity and age. That can be helpful for orientation—but spinal cord injury value depends heavily on proof that must be gathered locally and documented precisely.
In Gretna, insurers commonly focus on questions like:
- Whether the medical record supports causation (that the spinal injury is tied to the specific crash or incident)
- What level of neurological impairment is documented over time (not just an initial diagnosis)
- Whether future care needs are supported by records and expert input
- Whether your daily limitations are consistent and provable (therapy notes, functional assessments, and equipment needs)
An AI calculator can’t reliably evaluate those items because it doesn’t have your imaging results, discharge summaries, rehabilitation progress, or the kind of life-care documentation that serious spinal cases require.


