Grievous bodily injury

Grievous bodily injury includes, but is not limited to, any of the following categories of injury:
(1) Mutilation or disfigurement. Disfigurement includes permanent facial disfigurement or non-facial scarring that results in permanent restriction of motion;
(2) Dismemberment or amputation, including the removal of a limb or other appendage of the body;
(3) The loss of important bodily functions or debilitating internal disorder. These terms include:
(i) Permanent injury to a vital organ, in any degree;
(ii) The total loss or loss of use of any internal organ,
(iii) Injury, temporary or permanent, to more than one internal organ;
(iv) Permanent brain injury to any degree or with any residual disorder (e.g. epilepsy), and brain or brain stem injury including coma and spinal cord injuries;
(v) Paraplegia, quadriplegia, or permanent paralysis or paresis, to any degree;
(vi) Blindness or permanent loss, to any degree, of vision, hearing, or sense of smell, touch, or taste;
(vii) Any back or neck injury requiring surgery, or any injury requiring joint replacement or any form of prosthesis, or;
(viii) Compound fracture of any long bone, or multiple fractures that result in permanent or significant temporary loss of the function of an important part of the body;
(4) Injuries likely to require extended hospitalization, including any injury requiring 30 or more consecutive days of in-patient care in an acute care facility, or 60 or more consecutive days of in-patient care in a rehabilitation facility;
(5) Severe burns, including any third degree burn over ten percent of the body or more, or any second degree burn over thirty percent of the body or more;
(6) Severe electric shock, including ventricular fibrillation, neurological damage, or thermal damage to internal tissue caused by electric shock.
(7) Other grievous injuries, including any allegation of traumatically induced disease.

Source

16 CFR § 1116.2


Scoping language

None
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