Many burn cases don’t hinge on whether you were hurt—they hinge on what caused the burn, when it worsened, and what treatment was medically necessary.
In the real world, defense arguments often sound like:
- the burn was “minor” at first and should have healed quickly,
- later symptoms were caused by something else,
- you delayed treatment, or
- the incident happened differently than you reported.
Those disputes are especially common when burns involve scar formation, nerve pain, infection risk, or breathing issues after a fire, smoke exposure, or hot-liquid contact. Because burns can evolve over time, the timeline matters.


