Most online tools use simplified inputs (like medical bills, injury severity, or duration). That can give you a rough starting range, but malpractice claims are not valued like a generic “medical bills × number” equation.
In Sevierville cases, the bigger issue is usually not the existence of harm—it’s proving that:
- the provider fell below the Tennessee standard of care (what a reasonably competent provider would do), and
- that breach caused your specific outcome (not an unrelated complication), and
- your damages are supported by records that can hold up under scrutiny.
Because calculators can’t review operative reports, timelines, imaging, charting, consent forms, or expert opinions, the number you see online should be treated as educational, not predictive.


