After a head injury, it’s normal to search for a calculator because you want an answer now. But AI tools often treat your case like a spreadsheet: diagnosis label, symptom list, and a rough range.
In Roselle—where many people drive to work, commute through busier corridors, and navigate residential streets, parking lots, and retail areas—the real dispute often isn’t whether you had symptoms. It’s whether the evidence shows:
- the injury and symptoms were tied to the incident,
- symptoms persisted (or worsened) in a medically credible way,
- the impact affected work and daily functioning, not just “how you feel.”
That’s why a calculator should be viewed as a starting point for gathering information, not as a prediction of what an insurer will pay.


