Many burn injuries seem manageable right after the incident. Then, as swelling goes down, skin changes, or pain becomes more noticeable, the injury may require additional care. This matters because settlements generally reflect both:
- What you’ve already lost (ER care, follow-up visits, prescriptions, therapy)
- What you may still need (scar management, additional procedures, ongoing treatment)
In Franklin, common scenarios include:
- Kitchen and home fires (grease fires, space heater incidents, dryer/vent-related ignition)
- Workplace burns in industrial or service settings (hot surfaces, steam exposure, equipment contact)
- Hot-liquid scalds that initially look minor but later require specialty wound care
An AI tool may ask you for burn severity and symptoms. The problem is that burn severity often gets clarified only after medical evaluation—so an estimate can be wrong if it isn’t grounded in the same clinical information an attorney would use.


