Most AI-style calculators work by asking for basic inputs (injury type, symptoms, treatment, time missed) and then generating a rough range. That can be useful for organizing your thoughts.
However, Las Cruces cases often hinge on details that generic models don’t “see,” such as:
- How the crash or incident happened (impact details, head movement, speed, traffic control, visibility)
- Whether symptoms followed the timeline you reported (and whether the record supports it)
- Whether follow-up care occurred promptly and consistently
- How your injury affected your ability to function—not just whether you were diagnosed
A tool may suggest a range, but it can’t weigh credibility the way a claims adjuster does, and it can’t confirm causation the way medical records and specialist review must.


