Calculator Inputs
Use a clinician provided baseline when possible. The tool adjusts that baseline for planning.
Example Data Table
| Case | Base days | Condition | Severity | Age group | Expected | Optimistic | Conservative |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sample post procedure plan | 21.0 | Standard surgery | Significant | Older adult | 42.5 days | 36.1 days | 53.1 days |
| Simple flare recovery | 10.0 | Medical treatment or flare | Moderate | Adult | 12.2 days | 10.4 days | 15.3 days |
| Heavy activity return goal | 30.0 | Musculoskeletal injury | Severe | Adult | 60.7 days | 51.6 days | 75.9 days |
Formula Used
This page uses a weighted planning model. It is designed for general recovery scheduling and not as a validated clinical prediction rule.
= Base Days × Condition Factor × Severity Factor × Age Factor × Baseline Health Factor × Sleep Factor × Adherence Factor × Weekly Rehab Factor × Smoking Factor × Complication Factor × Activity Target Factor × Pain Factor × Home Support Factor × Target Function Factor
After the expected value is calculated, the tool also shows:
- Optimistic window = Expected Days × 0.85
- Conservative window = Expected Days × 1.25
- Milestones = percentage checkpoints of the expected timeline
How to Use This Calculator
- Enter a base recovery period from discharge paperwork, rehabilitation guidance, or clinician advice.
- Select the condition group and severity that best match the case.
- Adjust age, health, sleep, adherence, smoking, complications, pain, support, and target activity.
- Press the calculate button to view optimistic, expected, and conservative timelines.
- Review the milestone table and export the summary as CSV or PDF for planning conversations.
FAQs
1) What does this calculator estimate?
It estimates a general recovery window using a starting timeframe plus modifiers like severity, health, support, adherence, sleep, complications, and target function.
2) Is this calculator a diagnosis tool?
No. It does not replace examination, discharge instructions, rehabilitation guidance, or treatment decisions. Use it for planning and discussion only.
3) Why should I enter base recovery days first?
Recovery varies widely by condition and procedure. Starting from a realistic baseline makes the estimate more useful than using one fixed timeframe for everyone.
4) Why do smoking and complications increase the estimate?
These settings raise the multiplier because recovery planning often becomes longer when additional barriers or setbacks are present during the healing period.
5) Why does target function affect recovery days?
Returning to 80% function usually needs less time than aiming for full activity. Higher goals extend the timeline for more realistic planning.
6) Can I use this for surgery, illness, or injury?
Yes. Choose the closest condition group and provide an appropriate baseline. It works best as a broad scheduling aid across many recovery scenarios.
7) What is the difference between expected and conservative recovery?
Expected recovery is the central estimate. Conservative recovery adds extra planning margin, which can help with scheduling follow ups, work, travel, or support needs.
8) What should I do if symptoms worsen?
Contact a qualified clinician promptly. New warning signs, severe pain, breathing issues, dehydration, fever, or wound changes need professional assessment.