Most online tools are built around inputs like:
- estimated medical costs
- duration of pain or impairment
- whether the injury seems temporary or permanent
Those factors can be useful for planning questions, but they can’t evaluate the evidence that matters most in a Missouri case—such as:
- the accuracy of the medical timeline
- whether experts can support the “should have happened / didn’t happen” theory
- whether a later provider’s care broke the chain of causation
In short: a calculator may help you form a range, but it won’t tell you whether your claim is likely to survive investigation in Washington-area litigation.


