In a suburban community like Mount Kisco, injuries can look “minor” at first—dizziness, headaches, confusion, sleep disruption, or trouble concentrating—especially when the initial impact happened while you were commuting or crossing a street. The problem is that insurers may argue your symptoms are unrelated, improve quickly, or don’t justify the level of damages you’re claiming.
That’s why the “AI estimate” approach can be misleading if it ignores the real-life sequence of events:
- When symptoms began after the incident
- Whether you sought medical care promptly (and followed through)
- Whether treatment records show continuity rather than gaps
- Whether your cognitive symptoms are described in functional terms (work performance, driving safety, household responsibilities)
New York injury claims are evidence-driven. A tool can suggest categories of damages—but your outcome depends on whether the documentation supports causation and severity.


