Online tools often ask for a few inputs—like medical bills, diagnosis category, or injury severity—and then generate a “range.” That can be a useful starting point for getting your bearings.
But Hopewell cases still turn on questions that a basic calculator can’t fully capture:
- Whether the provider breached the standard of care (the “what should have happened” question)
- Whether that breach caused your specific harm (causation)
- How Virginia law treats damages and the evidence needed to support them
- How strong your records are—including imaging, consent forms, and clinical notes
In other words, the calculator can’t read your chart, evaluate competing medical explanations, or predict how an insurer will respond once experts weigh in.


