Many websites present a “calculator” that promises a number based on broad categories—injury severity, treatment length, or medical costs. That can be a starting point, but it’s rarely accurate for the kinds of disputes that determine whether a case can settle.
In Georgia, the outcome depends on proof—not just harm. A settlement discussion usually turns on:
- Whether the care fell below the applicable standard (what a reasonably competent provider would have done)
- Whether that breach caused your specific injury (not just that you were harmed)
- How convincingly the medical record supports the timeline
A calculator can’t read the operative report, interpret imaging, or evaluate whether causation is medically plausible. For residents of Bainbridge—where people often travel between local clinics, specialists, and hospitals—records may be spread across multiple providers. That makes evidence organization especially important and often can’t be captured by an online form.


