AI tools often work by asking for basic details (burn type, treatment, time off). The problem is that burn injuries frequently change after the incident—especially when scars, nerve sensitivity, or follow-up procedures emerge months later.
In San Carlos, that timing issue can be intensified by real-life factors, such as:
- Commute and scheduling constraints: Many people need follow-up care during work hours, then return to physically demanding routines (delivery work, trades, caregiving). Missed or delayed appointments can become a dispute point.
- Home-based and residential injury settings: Kitchen grease, space heaters, hot water systems, and defective appliances are common sources of burns in suburban homes. The “why it happened” may depend on maintenance and warning compliance.
- Insurance pressure after early treatment: Adjusters may request statements soon after the incident—before the full scope is known.
AI may suggest a range, but it can’t determine fault, causation, or whether your medical treatment supports future needs.


