AI tools typically generate a range based on inputs like injury severity and basic demographic information. The problem is that spinal cord injuries are rarely “plug-and-play.” Two people can share a diagnosis and still have dramatically different outcomes based on:
- documented neurological function (not just a label)
- complications that can evolve over time (skin breakdown, respiratory issues, spasticity)
- the actual care plan a clinician recommends
In Grenada, practical realities also shape damages. Many families must coordinate transportation to follow-up appointments, manage home accessibility challenges, and arrange daily support—details that can be hard for a generic model to capture.
Takeaway: Use AI as a starting point for questions—not as a substitute for a case-specific valuation.


