AI tools typically generate a range by using inputs you provide—like injury severity, age, and future care assumptions. That can be useful as a starting point because spinal cord injuries often involve long-term costs: rehabilitation, durable medical equipment, home accessibility changes, and paid or family caregiving.
But an AI estimate generally can’t access what matters most in a Verona claim:
- Your actual neurological findings (not just the diagnosis label)
- Imaging and medical documentation that supports causation
- Complications that can change the care timeline (pressure injuries, respiratory issues, bowel/bladder impacts)
- How your case fits Wisconsin’s litigation realities—documentation quality, insurer posture, and the credibility of medical and liability evidence
The bottom line: treat an AI result like a worksheet, not a promise.


