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The doctor diagnosed a broken nasal bone and a deviated nasal septum. Is the injury identification a minor injury? Several minor injuries
The nasal bone fracture is a minor injury, and the personal injury identification standard does not specify the injury level of nasal septum deviation. According to the classification principle of injury degree, the comprehensive evaluation is minor injury, which is subject to forensic identification.

Relevant regulations:

Identification standard 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.

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) facial scar with a single area greater than 3.0cm or multiple cumulative areas greater than 5.0cm.

E) small facial scar or abnormal pigment, the cumulative area is more than 8.0cm.

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.

Q) More than 2 teeth are missing or broken.

R) Substantial damage of parotid gland, submandibular gland or sublingual gland.

S) I have difficulty opening my mouth due to injury.

T) Jaw fracture (except alveolar process fracture and unilateral maxillary frontal process fracture).

U) zygomatic bone fracture.

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 2.0cm; Facial scratches are more than 4.0cm.

D) fracture of orbital inner wall.

E) eye contusion; Eye trauma affects beauty.

F) auricle trauma.

G) nasal bone fracture; A nosebleed.

H) fracture of maxillary frontal process.

I) oral mucosal injury; Tongue injury.

J) Missing or defective teeth; Fracture of alveolar process; Loose more than 2 or loose more than 3 times 1 piece.