A calculator can help you think in categories—such as medical bills, lost income, and non-economic harm. It can also prompt you to gather documents you’ll need anyway.
But a true Maryland malpractice valuation requires more than categories. The case usually turns on:
- Whether the provider deviated from the standard of care for the situation
- Whether that deviation caused the harm (not just that the injury happened during treatment)
- What damages can be proven with records and credible support
In practice, calculators can’t review imaging reports, operative notes, medication histories, nursing documentation, consultation records, or the “why” behind clinical decisions. Those details often decide whether a claim is strong—or whether defenses narrow liability.


