AI tools typically work by asking for inputs (diagnosis, symptom timeline, treatment history) and then generating a number or range. That can be useful when you’re overwhelmed and need a starting point.
The problem is that New York settlement decisions don’t rely on labels alone. Insurance adjusters and attorneys focus on:
- whether the incident is clearly connected to the brain injury (medical causation)
- whether symptoms were reported consistently over time
- how treatment aligned with the injury’s severity and prognosis
- whether the injury impacted your ability to work and function
An AI output may look precise, but if it assumes facts you don’t have—like the exact severity of symptoms, objective findings, or consistent medical follow-up—it can undervalue or overstate what a claim is likely worth.


