Many people think anesthesia malpractice is only about a dramatic “wrong medicine” moment. But in real cases, the injury often shows up through smaller, harder-to-spot failures—especially when care moves quickly from the OR to recovery.
Common Pueblo-related scenarios include:
- Post-op complications that escalate after discharge (e.g., confusion, breathing issues, severe nausea/vomiting, or persistent pain) that later require additional appointments.
- Monitoring and response problems during sedation or anesthesia—where the patient’s condition changed but the escalation wasn’t timely.
- Charting and record inconsistencies that make it difficult to connect the timeline of dosing, monitoring, and interventions.
- Handoff problems between anesthesia staff, recovery nurses, and admitting teams—especially when multiple teams contribute to perioperative care.
If you’re trying to answer “Was this preventable?” the key is building a timeline that medical reviewers can evaluate.


