Most calculators start with broad inputs—like injury severity or estimated damages—and then spit out a range. That’s helpful for curiosity, but Rhode Island cases depend on factors that calculators can’t see:
- Whether negligence can be proven through the medical record (charting, orders, test results, follow-up notes)
- Whether causation is supported by medical experts (how the error connects to the harm)
- Whether the harm was preventable under the accepted standard of care
- How long-term impacts are documented, not just felt
In practice, insurers and attorneys evaluate risk: the more clearly the record supports fault and causation, the more realistic settlement discussions become. Without that evidence, an estimate can be misleading—either too low or unrealistically confident.


