AI estimates usually work like this: you enter inputs (symptoms, diagnosis, treatment), and the tool returns a range. That can feel helpful—until you realize what’s missing.
For Painesville-area cases, the biggest gaps are often:
- Roadway and traffic narratives (how the crash or incident actually happened, what witnesses observed, and what reports say)
- Documentation timing (when symptoms were reported and how soon follow-up care occurred)
- Functional impact proof (what changed in work, driving, parenting, or daily tasks)
Because brain injury symptoms can overlap with migraines, sleep disorders, stress, or other conditions, Ohio adjusters look for medical records that connect your symptoms to the incident in a believable, consistent way. AI outputs can’t independently verify those connections.


