Most AI or calculator-based tools take a few inputs—your diagnosis, the type of error (when known), the length of treatment, and the rough cost of medical care—and generate an estimated range.
In practice, that range is most useful for understanding categories, such as:
- Past medical bills (hospital, physician, imaging, prescriptions)
- Future medical needs (ongoing care, rehabilitation, follow-up testing)
- Lost income (missed work and reduced ability to earn)
- Non-economic harm (pain, limitations, emotional distress)
What these tools typically cannot confirm is the evidence that drives Texas malpractice results—especially:
- Whether the provider’s conduct fell below the accepted standard of care
- Whether the negligence caused your specific injury (not just that the injury occurred during treatment)
- Whether the documentation supports a credible timeline of “before and after”
In other words: a calculator may help you ask better questions, but it doesn’t replace a record-based evaluation.


