Many online tools work like this: you enter injury severity and medical costs, and the calculator spits out a range. That can help you understand the language of damages, but it often misses the issues that matter most for New York malpractice claims.
In Port Chester (and Westchester County more broadly), cases frequently turn on things such as:
- Whether the error happened in a setting with fast turnover (urgent care, ER, outpatient clinics) where documentation can be critical.
- Whether your follow-up plan was realistic and communicated clearly—especially when multiple providers share responsibility.
- Whether the timeline matches what the medical records would predict (for example, symptoms, tests, imaging, referrals, and medication changes).
A calculator can’t review operative notes, nursing documentation, imaging reports, or the defense’s causation theory. It also can’t weigh how persuasive your treating providers and medical experts will be.


