Most calculators work by collecting a few general inputs—like treatment type, injury severity, and medical bills—and then applying a broad formula. That approach breaks down in real cases because medical malpractice in Florida turns on proof.
In practice, the biggest missing pieces are usually:
- Causation: whether the alleged lapse actually caused your specific harm (not just occurred around the same time)
- Standard of care: whether the provider’s decisions matched what a reasonably careful professional would do
- Documentation quality: what the chart, nursing notes, imaging reports, and consent forms actually show
If you’re in Stuart and your care involved a hospital admission, an urgent change in symptoms while traveling between appointments, or follow-up care that happened weeks later, those timeline questions become even more important. A calculator can’t read your records or evaluate competing medical explanations.


