Most AI tools produce ranges based on general patterns. That can be useful for organizing questions, but it’s not the same as a case-specific valuation.
In Rahway (and throughout New Jersey), insurers often look closely at whether the record supports:
- How the injury happened (the incident narrative)
- Whether the medical findings match the trauma timeline
- The functional impact (mobility, breathing/respiratory concerns, bowel/bladder involvement, skin risk)
- Whether future care is likely and documented
If the tool’s inputs are incomplete—such as an estimated injury level, an assumed recovery path, or missing life-care needs—the output can drift far from what an attorney can realistically pursue.


