AI tools can be helpful for organizing questions, but they often fail at the part that matters most: connecting your head injury to the incident with proof.
In Washington, insurers frequently scrutinize:
- whether symptoms were documented soon enough after the incident,
- whether treatment followed a consistent plan,
- and whether the injury-related limitations match what you were doing before (work, commuting, caregiving, driving).
A calculator might prompt you to enter a “diagnosis,” but it can’t reliably weigh your medical timeline or the quality of records—like whether Walla Walla-area providers documented cognitive complaints in a way that’s legible to adjusters and decision-makers.
The takeaway: treat AI as a starting point to organize records, not as a prediction of what you’ll receive.


