Many calculators present a “likely range” based on broad categories—diagnosis delays, surgical injuries, or general injury severity. That can be useful as a starting point, especially if you’re trying to plan for medical costs, time off work, or ongoing treatment.
But calculators can’t reliably account for the details that matter most, such as:
- what exactly was documented in the chart (and what wasn’t)
- whether the alleged breach actually caused the specific outcome
- how Massachusetts courts and juries typically evaluate medical experts and competing theories
In other words: an estimate can suggest “there may be damages,” but it can’t tell you whether your case is provable.


