In and around Harvey, many people get treated at hospitals and outpatient surgery centers that serve busy, high-volume patient populations. That can mean:
- Fast turnarounds between pre-op, anesthesia, and recovery
- Hand-offs between teams (and sometimes between units)
- Documentation that’s hard to line up across systems
When anesthesia goes wrong, the injury may not be obvious right away. Some patients notice symptoms during recovery; others only connect the dots after discharge—especially when cognitive changes, nerve pain, respiratory issues, or complications show up days or weeks later.
The legal question isn’t whether something went “wrong” in a general sense. It’s whether the care fell below the applicable standard and whether that lapse caused or worsened your injury.


