In Mineola, many people first search for a calculator after urgent events—ER visits, post-op follow-ups, medication changes, or a delayed diagnosis after an office appointment.
A typical calculator may estimate damages using broad categories like:
- past medical bills
- future treatment costs
- pain and suffering (non-economic damages)
But it usually can’t evaluate the parts that often decide outcomes in New York:
- whether the provider deviated from the standard of care
- whether that deviation caused your specific harm (not just occurred around the same time)
- what your medical chart actually documents
- whether your claim runs into procedural issues or timing limits
So think of a calculator as a way to understand what information matters—not a way to predict what Nassau County juries or insurers will accept.


