An AI tool can be a practical starting point. It may help you organize details like:
- what symptoms you’re experiencing (headaches, dizziness, memory issues)
- when you first sought care
- whether treatment is ongoing
- how the injury affected work and daily routines
That said, AI outputs can mislead when they treat your situation like a checklist. In Port Lavaca, insurers often focus on the same themes: whether the injury was documented quickly, whether symptoms stayed consistent, and whether the accident facts line up with the medical timeline.
A calculator can’t independently verify:
- whether your medical records actually support the accident-to-symptom connection
- the quality of the documentation (e.g., emergency notes vs. later summaries)
- how Texas adjusters evaluate credibility when symptoms are “invisible”
So think of AI as a way to generate questions—not a substitute for a case review.


