Instead of relying on a generic number, focus on the factors that most often drive value in Massachusetts burn cases:
- Medical documentation tied to the incident timeline (what happened, when symptoms developed, and how clinicians described the burn)
- Severity and permanence (depth, total area, scarring, skin sensitivity, nerve pain, and functional limits)
- Treatment intensity and follow-up care (burn center visits, grafting, wound care, scar management, therapy, and any future procedures)
- Whether inhalation or smoke exposure is part of the story (sometimes symptoms show up later)
- How clearly fault can be shown (maintenance records, witness accounts, product information, and safety practices)
In suburban communities like Bridgewater, burn injuries often occur in familiar settings—home heating systems, cooking equipment, garages/workshops, and employers’ day-to-day operations. Insurers frequently argue that a burn was “accidental” or “minor,” so the claim needs to be built around medical proof and causation.


