For specific standards, please refer to the identification standard of human injury degree.
Minor injury level 1
A) The length of a single facial wound or scar is greater than 6.0 cm; The cumulative length of multiple wounds or scars is greater than 10.0cm.
B) Huge facial scar with a single area greater than 4.0cm2; The cumulative area of multiple blocks is greater than 7.0cm2.
C) Small facial scar or obvious abnormal pigment, with the cumulative area exceeding 30.0cm2.
Minor injury level 2
A) The length of a single facial wound or scar exceeds 4.5cm; The cumulative length of multiple wounds or scars exceeds 6.0 cm.
B) The length of cheek penetrating injury, skin injury or scar is greater than 1.0cm.
C) Full-thickness laceration of the mouth and lips, with the length of skin wound or scar exceeding 65438 0.0 cm.
D) Large facial scar with a single area greater than 3.0cm2 or multiple cumulative areas greater than 5.0cm2.
E) Small facial scar or abnormal pigment, with a cumulative area of more than 8.0cm2.
slight wound
A) facial soft tissue trauma.
B) Facial injury with scar or pigment change.
C) facial soft tissue contusion with the area of facial skin abrasion greater than 2.0cm2; Facial scratches are more than 4.0cm.
Question 2: A few centimeters above the eyebrows on the face is enough to slightly hurt the eyebrows on the face, and more than 4.5 centimeters above the eyebrows on the face will reach secondary minor injuries. Anyone suspected of intentional injury shall be sentenced to fixed-term imprisonment of not more than three years, and compensation shall be paid for treatment expenses, lost time, nursing expenses and transportation expenses.
Question 3: There is a wound on the eyebrow, and the eyebrow is broken! Is a single facial wound or scar over 4.5cm in length a minor injury? The cumulative length of multiple wounds or scars exceeds 6.0cm, which constitutes minor injuries.
See "Criteria for Identification of Human Injury Degree"
Face, auricle
Minor injury level 2
A) The length of a single facial wound or scar exceeds 4.5cm; The cumulative length of multiple wounds or scars exceeds 6.0 cm.
Question 4: Is a 5 cm cut on the upper side of the eyebrow a minor injury? The wound 5 cm above the eyebrow is a minor injury.
"Identification standard of human injury degree" stipulates: minor injury is Grade II.
A) The length of a single facial wound or scar exceeds 4.5cm; The cumulative length of multiple wounds or scars exceeds 6.0 cm.
B) The length of cheek penetrating injury, skin injury or scar is greater than 1.0cm.
C) Full-thickness laceration of the mouth and lips, with the length of skin wound or scar exceeding 65438 0.0 cm.
D) Large facial scar with a single area greater than 3.0cm2 or multiple cumulative areas greater than 5.0cm2.
E) Small facial scar or abnormal pigment, with a cumulative area of more than 8.0cm2.
F) Fracture of orbital wall (except simple fracture of orbital inner wall).
G) eyelid defect.
H) Slight eversion of one eyelid.
I) One side of the upper eyelid droops to cover the pupil.
J) eyelid insufficiency.
K) Lacrimal gland organ injury caused by unilateral epiphora.
Question 5: How big are the wounds above two eyebrows? A single face is three centimeters long, which adds up to more than five centimeters. Both of them constitute minor injuries. This length means that after you are well, for example, you have just been injured, it is 10 cm. In fact, when you are ready, it will be 7 or 8 centimeters.
Question 6: The wound next to the eyebrows is six centimeters in total and ten stitches. Is it a minor injury? The wound next to the eyebrows caused by the injury was six centimeters in total, and ten stitches were stitched, reaching the level of minor injuries.
"Identification standard of human injury degree" stipulates: minor injury is Grade II.
A) The length of a single facial wound or scar exceeds 4.5cm; The cumulative length of multiple wounds or scars exceeds 6.0 cm.
B) The length of cheek penetrating injury, skin injury or scar is greater than 1.0cm.
C) Full-thickness laceration of the mouth and lips, with the length of skin wound or scar exceeding 65438 0.0 cm.
D) Large facial scar with a single area greater than 3.0cm2 or multiple cumulative areas greater than 5.0cm2.
E) Small facial scar or abnormal pigment, with a cumulative area of more than 8.0cm2.
F) Fracture of orbital wall (except simple fracture of orbital inner wall).
G) eyelid defect.
H) Slight eversion of one eyelid.
I) One side of the upper eyelid droops to cover the pupil.
J) eyelid insufficiency.
K) Lacrimal gland organ injury caused by unilateral epiphora.
L) cumulative length of auricle wound or scar is greater than 6.0cm.
M) Cumulative auricle amputation, defect or contracture deformity is equivalent to more than 15% of an auricle area.
N) defect of nasal tip or alar.
O) comminuted fracture of nasal bone; Bilateral nasal bone fracture; Nasal bone fracture combined with maxillary frontal process fracture; Nasal bone fracture with nasal septum fracture; Bilateral maxillary frontal process fractures.
P) tongue defect.
Question 7: How many centimeters does the wound suture count as minor injury? Is the cut on the forehead disfigured? How many centimeters is only one of the criteria for judging the injury. Specific can see the following criteria:
Head and neck injuries
Subfascial hematoma of the fifth cap;
The area of scalp avulsion injury is 20 cm2 (children 10 cm2); The area of traumatic scalp defect is 10 cm2 (5 cm2 for children).
Article 6 The cumulative length of sharp scalp injuries is 8 cm, and the cumulative length of children is 6 cm. The cumulative length of blunt injury is 6 cm, and that of children is 4 cm.
The seventh place is simple skull fracture.
Article 8 The head injury is diagnosed as a temporary disturbance of consciousness, and he is forgetful of recent events.
Article 9 Eye injuries
(a) eyelid injury affects the face or function;
(2) Simple orbital fracture;
(3) partial injury and dysfunction of lacrimal apparatus;
(four) part of the eyeball structure damage, affecting the face or function;
(5) Injury leads to decreased vision, and binocular corrected vision drops to 0. Below 7 (visual acuity decreased by 0. 2) Above that, monocular corrected vision drops to 0. Below 5 (visual acuity decreased by 0. 3 or above); The original monocular vision was low, and the vision decreased by one level after injury.
Mild visual field defect;
(6) traumatic strabismus.
Tenth nasal trauma
(a) comminuted fracture of nasal bone, or linear fracture of nasal bone with obvious displacement;
(2) The nose injury obviously affects the appearance or function of the nose.
Eleventh ear injury
(a) auricle injury to obvious deformation; One auricle defect accounts for one ear 10%, or two auricles defects account for one ear15%;
(2) Traumatic perforation of tympanic membrane;
(3) External auditory canal stenosis caused by external auditory canal injury;
(4) Hearing loss in one ear is 4 1 dB, and hearing loss in both ears is 30 dB.
Article 12 Oral injury
(a) Oral and lip injuries affect the face, pronunciation or eating;
(two) more than two teeth fall off or break;
(3) Oral tissues and organs are damaged, which affects the function of language, chewing or swallowing;
(4) Salivary gland injury with dysfunction.
Thirteenth zygomatic fracture or maxillary fracture; The temporomandibular joint was damaged to an opening (the distance between the upper and lower incisors) less than 3 cm.
The length of the 14th facial soft tissue single wound is 3. 5 cm (3 cm for children), or the cumulative length of the wound is 5 cm (4 cm for children) or the maxillofacial penetrating injury.
Fifteenth facial trauma has obvious scars, with a single length of 3 cm or a cumulative length of 4 cm; A single area of 2 square centimeters or a cumulative area of 3 square centimeters; The pigment affecting the face changes by 6 square centimeters.
Sixteenth facial nerve injury causes partial facial paralysis, which affects face and function.
Seventeenth neck soft tissue single wound length of 5 cm or cumulative wound length of 8 cm.
Does not meet the provisions of the preceding paragraph but has motor dysfunction.
Article 18 neck injury shows signs of suffocation.
Nineteenth neck injury and thyroid, throat, trachea or esophagus.
Whether disfigured or not depends on the effect after recovery.
Question 8: A wound 3 cm between the eyebrows and the bridge of the nose is not considered a minor injury, but it can only be considered a minor injury if it reaches 4.5 cm or more.
Question 9: Is a stitch on your face a minor injury? They are not judged by the number of stitches. The following are the criteria that constitute minor injuries. You can judge for yourself.
The length of a single facial wound or scar is greater than 4.5 cm; The cumulative length of multiple wounds or scars exceeds 6.0 cm.
A large area of facial scar, with a single area greater than 3.0cm2 or multiple cumulative areas greater than 5.0cm2.
Question 10: Is the cut on the eyebrow 1 2 cm minor or minor? A 1 to 2 cm wound on the eyebrow is not a minor injury, but more than 6 cm can only be a minor injury.