In many traumatic brain injury (TBI) claims, the early timeline is messy. Symptoms like headaches, dizziness, sleep disruption, irritability, memory gaps, and concentration problems can come and go—especially when you’re trying to keep up with work, school runs, and appointments.
AI-style calculators may ask for inputs such as diagnosis type, treatment length, and symptom categories. The problem is that these tools can’t reliably account for:
- Utah claim documentation standards (what records are actually available and what they say)
- Gaps caused by scheduling, referrals, or “wait-and-see” periods
- Comparative fault arguments that adjusters commonly raise after collisions (even when the other driver or property owner is primarily responsible)
- Local incident details—like how quickly you were examined, whether EMS was called, and what the accident report captures
In other words: an AI number can look confident even when the underlying assumptions don’t match your evidence.


