Most calculators are built around simplified variables—injury severity, length of treatment, medical bills, and sometimes non-economic impacts like pain. They may also prompt you to enter dates, diagnoses, and outcomes.
The problem is that Ohio medical negligence cases are evidence-driven. Two people can enter the same “category” (for example, delayed diagnosis or post-surgical complications) and still end up with dramatically different settlement outcomes because:
- The documentation ties (or doesn’t tie) the provider’s actions to the harm.
- The timeline is consistent (or inconsistent) with what a reasonable clinician would have done.
- Experts can explain how the deviation from the standard of care caused your specific limitations.
A calculator can’t review imaging reports, surgical notes, medication administration records, or expert interpretation of medical charts. In practice, those are the materials that shape negotiation value.


