Most calculators are built to estimate a range using general inputs—like treatment costs and injury severity. That can be useful as a starting point, especially if you’re trying to understand whether your situation may involve economic losses (medical bills, therapy, lost wages) and non-economic losses (pain, loss of enjoyment, emotional impact).
But in actual Georgia medical malpractice claims, value depends on details that calculators can’t see:
- Whether the provider’s actions fell below the standard of care for the specific situation
- Whether the mistake caused your harm (not just happened around the same time)
- What documentation exists—charts, lab reports, imaging interpretations, medication records, consent forms
- How long your condition is expected to last and what future care is likely
In other words: an estimate may tell you what could be argued, but it rarely predicts what insurers will accept after reviewing records.


