New York Medical Record Review for Attorneys

AI-Powered Analysis for New York Legal Cases

Medical Record Review for Attorneys

AI-Powered Analysis for Legal Cases in New York

Superinsight's AI analyzes medical records to identify key evidence supporting personal injury cases, medical malpractice litigation, and workers' compensation claims—with specific attention to New York legal requirements.

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Why Choose Our Medical Record Review

Superinsight's AI-powered platform is optimized for legal practice in New York:

Jurisdiction-Specific Analysis

Our AI understands New York's unique legal standards, including pure comparative negligence principles (CPLR § 1411), No-Fault insurance requirements, and specific Certificate of Merit requirements for medical malpractice cases.

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Significant Time Savings

Reduce review time by up to 70% while identifying more critical evidence to support your New York legal arguments and case strategy.

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Complete Confidentiality

Our medical record review operates without human reviewers, ensuring maximum privacy protection for your New York clients' sensitive information.

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New York Legal Compliance

All analysis aligns with New York-specific legal frameworks including HIPAA and New York health information privacy laws.

Case Enhancement

70%

Reduction in time spent reviewing New York medical records

3x

More relevant medical evidence identified compared to manual review

24 hrs

Average turnaround time for complete New York legal medical analysis

100%

HIPAA compliant with maximum data security

Frequently Asked Questions

How does your analysis help with New York's pure comparative negligence system?

Our AI identifies evidence that helps establish liability and damages under New York's pure comparative negligence system (CPLR § 1411). We highlight documentation supporting causation, injury severity, and damages, while helping you navigate the state's specific legal standards. The system helps identify evidence that can maximize recovery even when the plaintiff bears partial responsibility, as New York allows recovery regardless of the plaintiff's degree of fault.

How do you support New York's Certificate of Merit requirement for medical malpractice cases?

Our system identifies evidence that helps support the Certificate of Merit required under CPLR § 3012-a for medical malpractice cases. We highlight documentation addressing standard of care, alleged breach, and causation elements that strengthen your attorney's certification. Our analysis helps identify the specific medical evidence needed to support your certification that there is a reasonable basis to conclude that the defendant's acts or omissions constituted malpractice.

How does your system support New York's workers' compensation claims?

Our AI analyzes medical records to identify key evidence supporting compensability and impairment under New York's workers' compensation system. We highlight documentation that supports work-relatedness, causation analysis, and evidence relevant to New York's 2018 Permanent Impairment Guidelines. The system helps identify evidence supporting schedules of loss, temporary total disability, permanent partial disability, and permanent total disability designations under New York's workers' compensation laws.

How do you address New York's No-Fault insurance requirements for auto accident cases?

Our AI helps identify medical evidence that supports overcoming New York's No-Fault threshold (serious injury threshold) in auto accident cases. We highlight documentation addressing the statutory categories of qualifying injuries, particularly focusing on identifying evidence of "serious injury" as defined in Insurance Law § 5102(d). Our system specifically targets evidence supporting permanent loss of use of a body organ, member, function or system; permanent consequential limitation of use of a body organ or member; significant limitation of use of a body function or system; or a medically determined injury or impairment that prevents the injured person from performing substantially all of the material acts which constitute such person's usual and customary daily activities for at least 90 days during the 180 days immediately following the accident.

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See how AI-powered medical record analysis can strengthen your arguments and build more compelling cases.

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