Most online tools build ranges from simplified assumptions—like injury severity buckets or generic averages. That can miss key Connecticut realities:
- Connecticut requires proof of negligence and causation. It’s not enough that outcomes were bad; you must show the care fell below the accepted standard and that it caused the harm.
- Timelines matter more than people expect. A delay in responding to symptoms, a missed test result, or a discharge decision can change both causation and damages.
- Records quality can make or break valuation. In malpractice negotiations, incomplete documentation, inconsistent charting, or unclear consent forms can shift settlement leverage quickly.
So while a calculator may offer a starting point, it’s not a substitute for an evidence review of what was done, when, and why.


