Most settlement tools start with broad categories like treatment costs, injury severity, and whether damages might be temporary or permanent. That can help you think in terms of economic losses (medical bills, therapy, lost wages) versus non-economic losses (pain, suffering, loss of enjoyment).
But in Mississippi medical negligence cases, the missing piece is often the same: proof.
A calculator typically cannot verify:
- whether the provider’s conduct fell below the standard of care,
- whether the negligence caused your particular harm (not just something “bad that happened”),
- whether the medical record supports causation strongly enough for negotiation—or for trial.
In other words, a number online may reflect a “typical case,” but your settlement value depends on your documented medical history and how well it connects the dots.


