In Delano, many people travel to receive care—sometimes through busy outpatient centers, sometimes closer to home, but still under tight schedules and high patient flow. When anesthesia-related harm happens, families are often left with two urgent problems at once: dealing with medical recovery and trying to understand what the care team missed.
Anesthesia malpractice generally involves preventable harm tied to sedation and perioperative management—such as unsafe monitoring, medication dosing problems, delayed recognition of breathing or circulation issues, or failures during handoff between anesthesia and recovery staff.
What matters legally is not just that something went wrong. It’s whether the care fell below the standard a reasonably careful anesthesia provider would follow in similar circumstances—and whether that failure caused the injury you’re now treating.


