In Southern Illinois, it’s common for patients to receive perioperative care across a network of providers—surgeons, anesthesiology groups, hospitals, and post-op facilities. That can matter when injuries are tied to anesthesia because responsibility may involve more than one entity.
Common patterns we see in cases like these include:
- Monitoring gaps during sedation or emergence from anesthesia (vital sign changes not recognized or not acted on quickly enough)
- Medication timing or dosing issues that don’t match the patient’s observed condition
- Delayed escalation when respiratory or cardiovascular concerns develop
- Documentation problems after the fact—missing entries, inconsistent charting, or records that don’t line up with monitor data
When you’re living the day-to-day impact in Marion—driving for follow-ups, managing medication routines, and handling missed work—the legal process still starts with one goal: building an evidence-backed timeline that insurers can’t dismiss.


