Online tools can be useful for rough education, but they’re limited. A calculator can’t:
- read your hospital records, imaging, consent forms, and progress notes
- identify where the timeline matters (the “when” behind the “what”)
- evaluate whether your outcome was caused by the alleged mistake or by an underlying condition
- account for disputes common in malpractice claims—especially when multiple providers were involved
In the St. Louis-area medical system, cases frequently involve care across different settings (clinic → ER → inpatient follow-up). That creates record complexity that generic calculators can’t reflect.


