AI-style calculators can be tempting because they offer instant categories—medical bills, wage loss, pain and suffering—then spit out a range. But in practice, Queen Creek TBI cases often hinge on details that generic tools can’t reliably handle, such as:
- What the crash looked like (impact angle, speed, head contact, vehicle restraint use)
- When symptoms showed up (immediate concussion signs vs. delayed cognitive issues)
- How consistently treatment continued (especially when work schedules and recovery collide)
- Whether the record documents functional limitations (driving, concentration, sleep, work performance)
AI may feel precise, but it can’t verify the quality of medical notes, interpret neurological testing the way a legal team and medical professionals do, or predict how a claims adjuster will weigh causation.


