Most online tools generate a rough range using generalized assumptions—often based on things like medical bills, injury severity, and whether damages might be “economic” or “non-economic.” Those inputs can be a starting point, but they rarely capture what matters most in real Michigan malpractice negotiations:
- Whether the provider’s care fell below the applicable standard of care
- Whether the medical mistake caused your specific harm (not just happened around the same time)
- Whether the records support the story you’ll need to prove
- How long the injury affected you—especially if ongoing treatment is needed
In suburban communities like Sterling Heights, many cases involve routine care that turned complicated—missed follow-ups, diagnostic delays, medication mix-ups, or discharge planning problems. Calculators can’t reliably sort those fact patterns into legal categories the way an attorney can after reviewing your chart.


