Online tools typically use broad assumptions—like injury severity and treatment duration—to generate a rough range. But real settlement discussions usually turn on details that don’t fit neatly into a form:
- How quickly symptoms were evaluated (especially when clinics and urgent care are handling a high volume of patients)
- Whether follow-up was appropriate after lab work, imaging, or discharge
- What your medical records actually show—timelines, orders, charting, and communication
- Whether causation is medically provable (did the alleged mistake cause the harm you’re dealing with now?)
In a community where many people travel for work and rely on consistent medical follow-up, delays or miscommunication can have outsized consequences—missed work, extended treatment, and long-term limitations.


