AI tools are typically designed to estimate based on categories such as medical bills, lost wages, and pain and suffering. That can feel useful when you’re trying to make a plan.
For brain injury cases, though, the hardest part isn’t the label—it’s proving what happened and how the injury affected you afterward. Brain symptoms can look inconsistent: headaches may come and go, concentration may fluctuate, and some people “try to push through,” which can blur the picture.
A calculator can’t reliably:
- Confirm the accuracy of your medical diagnosis or imaging results.
- Evaluate whether your symptoms are medically connected to the incident.
- Account for how long symptoms persist or whether they worsen.
- Predict how an insurer will challenge your claim with South Carolina-specific defenses.
Think of AI-style estimates as a checklist prompt, not a value guarantee.


