In many Sanger-area cases, the dispute isn’t whether you were burned—it’s how severe it was at the time, what treatment was actually required, and whether the long-term effects match the incident. Burn injuries can worsen as swelling develops, infections appear, or skin damage declares itself over days.
That’s why the timing of your medical records matters. If you were treated at an urgent care or emergency facility and then followed up with burn-focused care, your chart should ideally show:
- the mechanism of the burn (heat, chemical, electrical, flame)
- burn depth and percent of body area (when documented)
- whether there were complications (infection, delayed healing, scarring risk)
- whether you needed ongoing care like wound care, therapy, grafting, or scar management
When those details are missing or inconsistent, insurers may argue that the injury was less significant—or that later symptoms weren’t caused by the incident.


