Manual chronology work still gets the job done. The problem is that it does not scale well when a case includes dozens of PDFs, years of treatment, and a deadline that does not move. Medical chronology software changes the first pass by organizing the record set faster and giving the reviewer a path back to the source page.
Where manual review still helps
Manual review is still necessary for judgment. Attorneys and paralegals decide what matters, what needs follow-up, and how to present the facts. Software does not replace that part of the job.
Where software changes the work
Software is useful when it removes the repetitive work that happens before legal judgment starts. That includes building the first chronology, collecting key events, and keeping citations attached to the output.
- Less page-flipping during the first pass
- More consistent chronology structure across matters
- Faster verification when a fact needs to be checked
- Cleaner handoff into billing review or case Q&A
The real comparison
The comparison is not software versus legal judgment. It is manual assembly versus a cited first pass. A good chronology workflow still keeps the reviewer in control, but it stops making the team rebuild the same structure by hand every time.
What to look for
If a team is comparing manual review with chronology software, the practical questions are straightforward:
- Does the chronology stay tied to the source page?
- Does the output save real review time?
- Does the format stay usable across different reviewers?
- Can the team move from chronology into billing or case Q&A without starting over?
Related pages
For a product comparison, see Paralegal Genius vs Manual Review. For the broader category, see medical record analysis software for litigation.
Compare the first pass, not just the pitch.
Run one record set through the workflow and compare the chronology, citations, and review time against your current manual process.