A burn case can change dramatically based on early evidence. Before you worry about numbers, focus on building a record.
1) Get medical care and make sure it’s documented Even if the burn seems “manageable,” burns can deepen over the next few days. Ask the treating provider to document:
- burn location and approximate size
- burn depth assessment (as best as possible)
- pain level and functional limits
- whether there are signs of inhalation injury (if there was smoke/steam)
2) Write down the incident while it’s fresh Include where it happened (home, business, job site), what caused it (hot liquid, chemical, electrical contact, fire/smoke), and what safety measures were present or missing.
3) Preserve proof tied to local circumstances Georgetown residents commonly deal with:
- restaurant and food service equipment
- residential hot water and kitchen hazards
- workplaces with shared tools and on-site maintenance
- traffic-related incidents where a spill or fire spread quickly
Take photos if you can safely do so, and keep any incident report number or supervisor contact information.


