Spinal cord injuries tend to be expensive not only because of the first hospitalization, but because of what comes after: ongoing therapy, durable medical equipment, home access needs, and day-to-day assistance.
In real Greenville claims, insurers frequently look for proof they can point to in the record, such as:
- documented neurological findings (not just a diagnosis label)
- consistent medical notes connecting the accident to the spinal injury
- objective tests and functional assessments over time
- a medically supported plan for future care
An AI tool can’t review your imaging, track changes in function, or evaluate whether your treating physicians actually support the prognosis a claim requires. That’s why AI numbers should be treated like a starting point—not a settlement prediction.


