Most calculators are built to accept a few inputs—like injury severity or medical bills—and then output a broad range. The problem is that real malpractice cases turn on details that a form can’t capture.
In practice, insurers and attorneys in California often argue about:
- Whether the provider met the standard of care (what a reasonable clinician would do in the same circumstances)
- Causation (whether the mistake actually caused your specific harm, not just something that happened around the same time)
- Documentation quality (charts, orders, imaging reports, medication records, consent forms)
- Medical causation complexity (especially when symptoms could have multiple explanations)
For Pomona patients—many of whom rely on timely follow-up and repeat visits—delays in documentation, gaps in treatment, or conflicting notes can dramatically affect settlement leverage.


