Most calculator-style tools are built around generic assumptions. They may ask for things like “severity” or “medical bills,” then spit out a range. But real claims are shaped by issues that calculators typically can’t measure—such as:
- whether the provider’s actions matched the accepted standard of care at the time
- whether the harm was caused by the alleged error (not by an unrelated progression of illness)
- whether the medical record clearly supports the timeline you believe happened
In Anderson, that matters because many residents receive care across multiple settings—urgent care, hospital services, specialists, and follow-up providers—so the “story” is often spread across different records. If the timeline is hard to reconstruct, settlement discussions can stall.


