AI tools can be useful for organizing facts—symptoms, treatment dates, missed work, and other inputs. But after a traumatic brain injury, small gaps in your timeline can matter a lot.
Common reasons AI estimates are off in real Jamestown cases include:
- Delayed reporting or evolving symptoms. Concussion and head-injury symptoms can worsen over time (headaches, sleep disruption, memory issues, irritability). Insurers may argue symptoms weren’t caused by the original event.
- Incomplete medical documentation. If records don’t show consistent follow-up—especially with neurology, concussion clinics, or therapy providers—your claim may be valued as less severe.
- Functional impact not clearly documented. Brain injuries often affect concentration, fatigue, driving safety, and the ability to perform routine job tasks. If the impact isn’t captured in writing, the “severity” may be underestimated.
- Assumptions that don’t match your case. AI may assume a level of treatment, imaging, or recovery that simply didn’t happen.
Bottom line: treat an AI number as a starting point for questions—not as the settlement you “should” receive.


