A calculator typically works like a simplified worksheet: enter injury type, treatment duration, and costs, then receive a number or range.
In real Kansas medical negligence disputes, the value is shaped less by the injury label and more by the proof. That proof usually includes:
- Documented causation (showing the care fell below the standard and caused the harm)
- Consistency between records and diagnoses (timelines that don’t “fit” can weaken a claim)
- Credible medical projections (especially for future treatment)
Also, the way cases resolve in practice depends on how insurers and defense counsel assess risk—not just the existence of damages.


