In a busy perioperative setting, anesthesia care is measured in minutes. In Richmond Hill, many residents split care across providers and facilities—pre-op testing may happen days earlier, surgery occurs at a different location, and follow-up can be with another clinician. That makes it especially important to determine:
- what anesthesia plan was used and when it changed
- how monitoring was documented during sedation
- whether responses to abnormal vitals were timely
- how medication administration records align with chart notes
When the records are inconsistent—common when documentation is delayed, transferred, or revised—the defense may argue the injury isn’t connected to anesthesia or that the chart “speaks for itself.” A local legal team focuses on building a clean timeline that can be understood by insurance adjusters and, if needed, medical experts.


