Many burn injuries start with a moment that feels manageable—then worsen. In a smaller community like Kewanee, it’s common for people to:
- wait to see if redness or swelling improves,
- return to work quickly if their job requires manual tasks,
- switch between providers (urgent care, ER follow-ups, outpatient therapy), or
- rely on family members for transport to appointments.
Those real-life factors matter because insurance adjusters look for consistency. If treatment records show gaps, the defense may argue the burn wasn’t as severe—or that later symptoms came from something else.
A calculator won’t know whether your burn deepened over time, whether you needed grafting, or whether your range of motion changed. That’s why the “estimate” should be treated as a planning tool, not a prediction.


