Many online “AI” tools can organize information, but they can’t verify the details that matter most in an Auburn claim—especially the sequence of events and symptom continuity.
For example, after a crash on a commute route, a fall in a store, or a sports-related impact, symptoms may start mildly and evolve. In TBI matters, that evolution is often where value is won or lost:
- When symptoms were first noticed (and whether they were documented)
- Whether you followed up with appropriate care
- How providers described cognitive or neurological effects
- Whether treatment gaps give the defense a reason to dispute severity
A good AI calculator can’t read your medical record, review imaging, or interpret clinical notes. It also can’t anticipate how an adjuster may argue that later issues were unrelated. That’s why your “inputs” need to be tied to evidence, not just a diagnosis label.


