AI tools can generate a number by using broad patterns—injury “category,” age, and a few inputs you type in. The problem is that spinal cord injury outcomes are highly individualized.
In The Dalles, many serious cases begin with scenarios like:
- High-speed highway collisions where impact forces can cause vertebral fractures and immediate neurological symptoms
- Slips or falls in public areas during rainy months, when balance and reaction time are reduced
- Commercial and delivery vehicle incidents where braking distance and visibility matter
- Pedestrian and bicycle crashes where trauma can be sudden and evidence-heavy
Those facts affect liability, medical causation, and future needs. An AI calculator won’t know whether your injury was caused by a specific mechanism of harm, what the imaging showed at the time, how quickly symptoms were documented, or whether experts can tie your current deficits to the initial event.
Takeaway: Use an AI number as a starting point for questions—not as a forecast of what Oregon courts or insurers will ultimately treat as provable damages.


