AI-based tools are built to work with structured inputs—diagnosis, symptom lists, treatment frequency, and sometimes employment impact. Real traumatic brain injury claims are messier.
In Myrtle Beach, adjusters frequently focus on issues like:
- Timing: whether symptoms were reported quickly after the incident or only showed up later.
- Documentation continuity: whether follow-up care happened consistently (especially after visitors return home).
- Location-specific evidence: what was captured by cameras near busy corridors, hotels, parking areas, or entertainment venues.
- Exposure factors: whether a claimant’s symptoms could be attributed to something else (sleep deprivation, migraines, dehydration, substance effects, stress) rather than the accident.
That’s why an AI “range” should be treated as a checklist—not a prediction.


