Many online tools work like this: you enter information about the injury, recovery length, and medical costs, and the tool returns a rough range.
That can feel practical in Westfield because medical care often intersects with real-life schedules—commutes, employer coverage, school schedules, and the need to keep moving forward even while symptoms are evolving.
But the valuation range a calculator produces is only as accurate as the story you enter. In real cases, the details that drive value are often the details that are hardest to summarize quickly:
- What changed after the missed/incorrect decision (progression vs. stability)
- Whether follow-up care was timely and consistent with the standard of care
- How your documented symptoms line up with causation
- Whether the injury created lasting functional limits that affect work and daily life
In other words, the “math” may be simple; the proof usually isn’t.


