In many Wake Forest cases, the dispute isn’t whether you were burned—it’s how the insurance company frames the impact.
Common reasons offers come in too low include:
- Injury progression wasn’t fully documented. Burns can worsen over days, and insurers may argue your later treatment was unrelated.
- Scar and function limitations weren’t tied to medical findings. If you can’t grip, bend, work around heat, or perform daily tasks, that needs to be reflected in records.
- Causation feels “unclear” because the incident scene changed. For example, a workplace area might have been cleaned, a piece of equipment replaced, or a product returned.
- Missed follow-ups create a credibility fight. Even a short delay can be used to argue the injury wasn’t severe.
A tool can’t fix those problems. Your documentation and your case narrative can.


