Online tools may ask for inputs like medical bills, injury severity, or how long symptoms lasted. Those factors matter—but they don’t capture the evidence Ohio cases are built on.
In practice, the difference between a low and higher valuation usually comes down to:
- Whether the medical record supports negligence (chart entries, orders, monitoring notes, imaging/lab results)
- Whether causation is documented (showing the error—not just the illness—produced the harm)
- Whether future impact is supported (treating provider opinions, objective findings, and reasonable projections)
A “settlement calculator” can’t read the chart for you, interpret conflicting reports, or evaluate expert medical testimony. If you’re using an estimate as a stand-in for legal review, it can steer you wrong.


