AI tools typically generate a “range” based on inputs you provide—injury severity, age, and the type of care you expect. But spinal cord injury cases in Pennsylvania are won or lost on what the record can prove:
- Objective neurological findings (what doctors documented, and when)
- Causation evidence connecting the accident to the neurological injury
- A credible life-care plan supporting future medical and assistance needs
- Functional limitations that match how you actually live and move
A calculator can’t review imaging, neurological exams, therapy notes, or the kind of functional assessments insurers rely on. In Butler, where many claims involve commuting corridors and roadways with complex traffic patterns, even small gaps in the story or records can become major disputes.
Bottom line: treat an AI output as a starting point for questions—not as a prediction of what you’ll recover.


