AI tools typically work by asking for inputs (injury type, symptom duration, treatment history) and then generating a range. In real Beaverton cases, those inputs are rarely as complete as the calculator assumes.
For example, after an incident near Nike campus areas, major commuter corridors, or busy crosswalks, people sometimes report symptoms inconsistently at first—because they think it was “just a concussion,” because they’re trying to get back to work, or because memory gaps make it harder to track dates.
An AI calculator can’t reliably account for:
- How Oregon insurers evaluate causation when symptoms overlap with migraines, stress, sleep disruption, or preexisting issues.
- Whether your medical record shows continuity (follow-ups, referrals, therapy notes) rather than a one-time visit.
- What the accident documentation says (impact details, witness statements, traffic-control context).
Think of AI as a starting point to organize your information—not as the final valuation.


