Most burn calculators are built from broad assumptions—like generic burn severity categories and average medical costs. Texarkana cases often involve details that don’t fit neatly into averages, such as:
- Delayed symptoms after a fire, grill accident, or workplace exposure (especially when inhalation irritation or infection risk develops later)
- Scarring and range-of-motion limits that affect daily tasks—dressing, cooking, gripping tools, or working a shift
- Complications tied to follow-up care (missed appointments, gaps in wound care, or difficulty getting specialty treatment)
- Causation disputes when the defense argues the burn wasn’t caused by the alleged hazard
A calculator can point you in the right direction, but it can’t tell you whether your story is supported well enough to demand full compensation.


