AI tools are usually built on patterns—not the particular facts of your collision, slip, or workplace incident. In Taylorsville, that mismatch often shows up in three places:
- Commute-style crashes create fast disputes about causation. After a traffic accident, an insurer may argue your symptoms were preexisting, stress-related, or not connected to the impact.
- Gaps in treatment can be used aggressively. If you delay follow-up care, change providers, or can’t document therapy and medication consistently, the insurer may reduce the value.
- Head injuries are “invisible,” but proof isn’t. Utah claim evaluations still require medical documentation and functional evidence—not just a diagnosis label.
So the goal isn’t to treat an AI estimate like a verdict. It’s to identify what your case needs so the insurance company can’t dismiss your symptoms.


