Online tools can be useful for organizing your thoughts, but they don’t have the two things that matter most in a real Texas case:
- Medical proof of burn depth and progression (and whether complications developed)
- Evidence of how the burn affected your ability to work and live
Burn injuries can change after the initial incident—especially when treatment continues over weeks or months. In Burkburnett, many injury reports involve people working in physically demanding roles (construction, oilfield-adjacent work, maintenance, warehouses, and transportation). When your hand, arm, leg, or torso is affected, the “real loss” often shows up as missed overtime, reduced duties, or the need for accommodations.
A calculator can’t measure that impact the way Texas insurance adjusters expect—through records, photos, provider notes, and work documentation.


