Many calculators build ranges using generalized assumptions (severity, treatment type, and broad injury categories). That can be misleading in Hurst because local cases often involve practical, day-to-day impacts tied to Texas living—missed work, follow-up appointments, transportation constraints, and the way families manage care while juggling school, commuting, and household responsibilities.
In other words: even if two people have the same diagnosis, the value can differ based on:
- how quickly symptoms were recognized and acted on
- what documentation exists (notes, orders, consent forms, imaging reads)
- whether later providers connected the harm to the earlier error
- whether the injury disrupted work schedules, driving, caregiving duties, or ongoing treatment
A calculator can’t reliably “see” those facts.


