Online tools often work like this: you enter details, and the calculator returns a broad range based on typical outcomes. That can feel helpful—until your situation doesn’t match the averages.
In Kansas, insurers commonly scrutinize whether the injury severity, treatment timeline, and claimed future needs are supported by records. For burns, that means the estimate can be off if:
- The burn depth or affected area isn’t clearly documented early.
- Treatment escalated later (for example, additional wound care, graft-related care, or specialty follow-ups).
- There’s a gap between the injury and medical evaluation.
- Work restrictions changed after the acute phase and weren’t tracked.
The Great Bend reality: many residents are juggling jobs that require hands-on work—manufacturing, maintenance, agriculture-related support, healthcare, and construction-adjacent roles. If your burn affected grip, range of motion, or dexterity, you’ll want evidence that matches how your job actually functions.


