← March 25, 2027 edition

wayco

AI-powered data intelligence layer for medical treatment of legal cases

Wayco Connects Personal Injury Plaintiffs to the Right Doctor in Seconds, Not Weeks

LegalTechHealthcareInsuranceArtificial Intelligence

Personal injury law firms handle thousands of cases where plaintiffs need medical treatment, documentation, and expert coordination to build their claims. The process of connecting an injured plaintiff with the right medical specialist, managing their treatment records, and preparing the case for settlement is almost entirely manual.

A typical personal injury firm might have dozens of open cases, each requiring coordination between the client, multiple medical providers, insurance adjusters, and opposing counsel. Case managers spend their days on phone calls, tracking down records, and manually matching patients with providers based on injury type, location, and insurance coverage.

This manual coordination creates bottlenecks. Clients wait weeks for appointments. Records get lost between providers and the law firm. Settlement timelines stretch because documentation is incomplete. Every delay costs the firm money and costs the client time without treatment.

The med-legal technology stack is fragmented: case management in one system, medical records in another, billing in a third. No single platform connects the medical treatment journey to the legal case lifecycle.

Wayco, backed by Y Combinator, builds the intelligence layer that connects these pieces, from intake to settlement.

The Micro: AI That Reviews Records and Matches Providers

Iqbol Temirkhojaev founded Wayco to automate the operational work that bogs down personal injury case management. The platform handles case intake and review, provider matching, medical record analysis, and lead management.

The provider matching feature connects plaintiffs with appropriate medical specialists based on case history, injury type, and geographic proximity. This replaces the manual process of case managers calling through their provider network to find available specialists.

The voice AI capability allows natural conversation for reviewing medical records and generating case summaries. This is useful for case managers who need to quickly understand a patient’s treatment history and current status without reading through hundreds of pages of medical records.

The platform claims projected efficiency gains of 90% for medical case management operations. Even if the actual improvement is half that, the time savings for busy personal injury firms would be substantial.

Competitors include Litify (legal case management), Filevine (legal practice management), and specialized med-legal platforms like Settlement Funding. Wayco differentiates by focusing specifically on the medical treatment coordination layer rather than general case management.

The Verdict

Wayco is addressing a genuine inefficiency in a large, profitable market. Personal injury firms generate significant revenue and are willing to invest in tools that accelerate case resolution.

At 30 days: how many cases are being actively managed through Wayco, and what is the time savings per case?

At 60 days: are provider matching recommendations accurate and useful, or do case managers still need to override them?

At 90 days: is Wayco reducing average case duration from intake to settlement?

I think Wayco has identified the right wedge into the legal tech market. Medical treatment coordination is the specific bottleneck in personal injury practice that general case management tools do not solve well. If the AI can reliably handle record analysis and provider matching, every personal injury firm becomes a potential customer.