Many online tools ask you to plug in basics like medical bills, symptom severity, or the length of treatment. That can be useful for planning—but it can also be misleading when your situation doesn’t fit the tool’s assumptions.
In Roseville, where patients often juggle work schedules, follow-up appointments, and multiple providers (including specialists and imaging centers), the details matter. A calculator usually can’t account for:
- Gaps or inconsistencies in the medical record created by fragmented care
- Whether the harm was temporary vs. permanent
- The strength of evidence around causation (what actually caused the worsening)
- Michigan-specific procedural requirements that affect how quickly a case can move
A better way to think about an online estimate: it helps you ask the right questions—not predict a guaranteed outcome.


