Many calculators present a “range” based on injury type, medical costs, and symptom severity. That can feel reassuring—especially when you’re trying to plan around lost income or mounting bills.
In real New York malpractice claims, however, value depends heavily on evidence and proof—not just the fact that someone was injured. Two people in the same medical scenario may have very different outcomes depending on:
- whether records document what occurred
- whether clinicians followed accepted standards of care
- whether experts can connect the care to the harm
- whether the injury was preventable (as opposed to an unavoidable complication)
So, treat any calculator as an educational “temperature check,” not a prediction.


