AI tools typically work by taking inputs—like the injury body part, treatment history, missed work, and claimed impairment—and returning a “range” based on patterns from other cases.
But in Georgia, workers’ compensation results hinge on specific, document-based facts. An AI tool can’t review:
- The quality of your medical records (and whether your restrictions are clearly supported)
- Whether your treatment was consistent and tied to the workplace event
- How your employer and insurer characterize the incident and your reported symptoms
- The procedural posture of your claim (accepted vs. disputed issues)
For Doraville residents, this matters because the “paper trail” often reflects real-world friction—missed forms, gaps in documentation due to work schedules, or delays in getting records from providers. The estimate may look reasonable, but it can miss the very details that change negotiation leverage.


