AI tools typically work by asking for inputs—like diagnosis, treatment dates, and symptom severity—then producing a range. The problem is that real cases rarely fit neat categories.
In Villa Rica and across Georgia, insurers commonly focus on questions like:
- When symptoms started (and whether they were reported consistently)
- Whether follow-up care happened (and whether it looks reasonable)
- Whether the injury description lines up with medical findings
- Whether the other side points to alternate causes (prior conditions, stress, migraine history, or unrelated incidents)
If the “AI” assumes your symptoms were mild, short-lived, or that treatment stopped quickly, the output can understate the value—even when your functional losses are significant.


