AI tools typically work by taking the information you enter (symptoms, treatment, diagnosis labels) and outputting a range. That can be helpful for organizing questions.
But in real injury claims—especially those involving concussion, post-concussion syndrome, or other brain-related symptoms—the value hinges on evidence quality and timeline. In Liberal, that often means:
- Documented symptom continuity after the incident (headaches, dizziness, sleep disruption, cognitive problems)
- Consistent treatment and follow-up (including referrals when symptoms persist)
- Clear incident documentation (what happened, where it happened, and why liability is supported)
- Functional impact that can be tied to daily life and work
An AI estimate can’t verify whether your records show the kind of continuity insurance companies look for under Kansas claim evaluation practices. The “range” may feel confident, but it often can’t account for how adjusters weigh proof.


