Most calculators start with broad inputs—like severity of injury, medical bills, or whether damages are “economic” vs. “non-economic.” That can be useful for sense-making, especially early on.
But in real Wisconsin medical negligence cases, the settlement value hinges on issues that a typical calculator can’t measure:
- Whether the provider breached the standard of care (what a reasonably competent provider would have done)
- Whether the breach caused the harm—not just that the harm occurred
- Whether the injury is documented clearly enough to withstand insurer and defense arguments
- Whether medical experts can explain the causation chain in a way a jury would understand
Bottom line: an online range may offer a starting point, but it can’t evaluate medical records, expert opinions, or the specific timeline of care.


