In practice, burn cases don’t just turn on how bad the burn looks the day it happened. They often turn on what shows up in the record in the days and weeks that follow.
If you were treated in the ER, a burn center, or through follow-up care, the insurer will expect your medical timeline to match the incident story:
- When the burn occurred and when you were first evaluated
- Whether the burn deepened over time (common with some thermal injuries)
- Whether doctors documented scarring risk, nerve involvement, or functional limits
- Whether you received consistent follow-up (wound care, therapy, scar management)
For Dalton residents, this matters because many people initially seek urgent care and then later require specialty treatment. If the transition isn’t clearly documented, defendants may argue the later complications weren’t caused by the original incident.


