An AI-based calculator typically uses the information you enter—such as the type of injury, how long recovery took, and what medical bills or losses you report—to generate an educational range.
That can be helpful when you’re trying to understand:
- which damage categories people often discuss in medical negligence cases,
- what details tend to move a valuation up or down,
- and what questions you should be asking your lawyer next.
But an AI tool generally cannot:
- confirm medical causation (that the provider’s conduct caused your specific harm),
- evaluate the standard of care using expert medical knowledge,
- account for gaps in documentation,
- or predict how an insurer will weigh risk in a real negotiation.
In other words, treat the output as a starting point—not a verdict.


