In the Plainfield area, traumatic brain injuries often occur in scenarios like:
- Rear-end collisions and lane-change crashes during rush-hour slowdowns
- Pedestrian or cyclist impacts near retail corridors and busier intersections
- Construction, warehouse, and industrial work injuries where head protection and safety procedures are central
- Slip-and-fall incidents in parking lots, entryways, and commercial spaces where ice, debris, or lighting can be disputed
In these situations, an AI tool may ask for inputs such as symptoms, treatment, and length of recovery. The problem is that real cases hinge on details AI can’t “see”—for example, whether emergency documentation captured symptoms accurately, whether follow-up care happened consistently, and whether the incident sequence supports causation.
Bottom line: in Plainfield, a calculator should be treated like a checklist—not a valuation.


