AI-style tools can:
- Help you list incident details (date, location, what you were doing)
- Sort medical history into categories (ER visit, follow-ups, therapy, medications)
- Track how symptoms affected daily function (sleep, concentration, headaches, mood)
- Identify missing documentation you’ll likely need later
But AI calculators are not a substitute for case evaluation. In Evansville, the biggest reason estimates go wrong is that they treat a diagnosis as if it automatically proves causation and severity. For TBI cases, that proof usually requires consistent medical documentation and a clear timeline—especially when symptoms can overlap with other conditions.
Key takeaway: use AI to prepare questions and organize records, not to accept an “answer” without legal review.


