Most calculators are built around simple inputs—medical bills, injury severity, and timeframes. In real Kansas malpractice settlement discussions, insurers and defense teams spend most of their effort on issues that a calculator can’t reliably measure:
- Whether the care fell below the accepted standard for the specific setting (clinic vs. hospital, staffing level, patient risk factors)
- Whether negligence caused your specific harm (causation is often the largest dispute)
- Whether your medical records tell a consistent story over time
In other words, the number you see online may reflect broad assumptions, but the case value usually turns on what Kansas attorneys call the proof of fault and proof of causation.


