In a community like Sierra Vista, many people receive care across multiple steps—pre-op visits, anesthesia clearance, ambulatory or hospital surgery, then follow-up appointments in different settings. When something goes wrong during sedation or perioperative monitoring, the story is frequently spread across:
- anesthesia charts and monitoring printouts
- medication administration records
- nursing notes and post-procedure assessments
- discharge paperwork and follow-up instructions
The result is that even when the injury is very real, it can be hard to prove what happened when—especially if the chart is hard to interpret, data is missing, or narratives don’t match monitor trends.
Our approach is built around reconstructing the timeline and identifying the exact points where standard anesthesia monitoring and decision-making may have failed.


