After an injury, the bills start adding up quickly: ER copays, follow-up visits, prescriptions, missed shifts, and therapy or specialist appointments. In Ammon, where many people commute to surrounding areas for work and rely on steady schedules, even a short disruption can create wage pressure.
That’s where AI calculators often attract attention. They may ask for a few details—injury type, symptoms, treatment timeline—and then generate a range.
The problem is that TBI outcomes aren’t “plug-and-play.” Two people can have the same diagnosis label and very different evidence quality. In Ammon-area disputes, the difference often comes down to:
- whether symptoms were documented consistently in the months after the incident
- whether medical providers connected the accident to ongoing neurological effects
- whether functional limits impacted work and daily life in a way that can be explained
AI can help organize information—but it shouldn’t replace that evidence-building step.


