Most AI-style tools work by taking inputs—like injury type, treatment history, and symptom duration—and generating a rough range. That can be useful when you’re overwhelmed and you want a starting point for questions.
In New Philadelphia, where many cases arise from commuting crashes, intersection impacts, and highway merges, the missing piece is often the same: the timeline of symptoms and the proof tying them to the crash. An AI estimate may not fully account for:
- whether your concussion symptoms were documented promptly after the incident
- how consistent your follow-up care was (and whether you explained any gaps)
- whether your job duties changed due to cognitive symptoms
- whether the responsible party’s negligence is strongly supported by accident evidence
In other words, an AI result can’t replace the evidence that Ohio adjusters need to evaluate causation and severity.


