Many burn cases are decided less by what happened “in theory” and more by what’s provable. After a burn, the first 24–72 hours often determine whether your claim later looks clear and consistent.
Consider gathering:
- Emergency and follow-up medical records (urgent care, ER, burn clinic, primary care)
- Photos taken promptly (and later) showing the burn’s progression and any scarring
- A written timeline: what you were doing in Homewood when the incident occurred, when symptoms started, when you sought treatment
- Work and schedule proof: time missed, modified duties, or reduced hours (important for compensation of lost income)
- Incident details: what caused the burn (hot liquids, flames, chemicals, electrical exposure) and what safety steps were present or missing
If your burn occurred around a workplace, a property managed by a landlord or association, or a shared facility, documentation becomes even more important—because multiple parties may try to shift responsibility.


