AI tools are often built to take inputs—like symptoms, treatment dates, and work impact—and then generate a rough range.
That can help you organize questions such as:
- What treatments were recommended versus what you actually received?
- Are your symptoms consistent over time?
- Did the injury affect your ability to work, drive, or manage daily tasks?
But AI can’t:
- confirm what happened in your specific Conway-area incident,
- evaluate whether your medical evidence is strong enough under South Carolina claim standards,
- or weigh the real-world negotiation factors that insurers use in local settlement practices.
In short: treat AI output as a checklist—not as a promise.


