Many Seymour patients go to treatment expecting a straightforward procedure—then the situation changes quickly. It might involve:
- a transfer between units or facilities during the same hospital stay,
- a discharge followed by urgent return for complications,
- or follow-up care with outside clinicians who document symptoms but not the intraoperative details.
For a malpractice claim, those transitions can create gaps in the story. Even when everyone acted “in good faith,” the timing and documentation consistency can become the central issue. A strong case often turns on whether the anesthesia record aligns with:
- monitor vitals and alarm events,
- medication administration timing,
- nursing notes and handoff summaries,
- and post-anesthesia recovery observations.
If you’ve been told the charts “are complete,” it may still be worth having a lawyer verify whether the timeline is coherent—because incoherence is often where answers start.


