Online calculators often work like this: you enter a burn type, severity, and treatment history, and the tool returns an estimated range. The problem is that Springfield cases—like cases across Tennessee—depend on proof.
A calculator can’t:
- review your medical imaging, operative notes, or burn center assessments
- confirm whether your injuries match the reported mechanism (scald vs. thermal vs. chemical)
- evaluate credibility issues that adjusters commonly raise
- predict how long you’ll need scar management, therapy, or follow-up surgeries
That means a number from an AI tool is best viewed as a conversation starter, not a prediction of what you’ll receive from an insurer.


