Most tools ask you to enter injury details—diagnosis, treatment dates, severity, length of recovery, and sometimes medical costs. Then they apply simplified assumptions to generate a range.
In real Danville cases, the timeline is usually the battleground:
- Was the condition recognized late during a weekend/after-hours visit?
- Did follow-up care actually happen, or did it get delayed due to scheduling, discharge instructions, or incomplete documentation?
- Did worsening symptoms get treated as “expected” when they weren’t?
If your answers to a calculator are missing even one key date—such as when symptoms first appeared, when imaging was ordered, or when a referral was made—the estimate can drift dramatically.


