Rogers is growing fast, and with that comes a familiar pattern: people often end up seeing multiple facilities and providers—urgent care, imaging centers, surgery schedules, rehab, and follow-ups—sometimes across tight timelines. When something goes wrong, it can be hard to know whether the harm is “just how recovery goes” or whether an avoidable error changed the outcome.
That’s why many people begin with an estimate: they want to understand whether they’re dealing with a medical misstep that will cost them more time, money, and function than they were told.
A local, evidence-driven approach matters because the timeline is usually the whole story: what happened next, what was documented, and what was (or wasn’t) communicated.


