In New Orleans, many surgeries involve patients who arrive from out of the city for medical tourism, who commute from the suburbs around the metro area, or who go through pre-op and post-op processes that are spread across multiple locations. When something goes wrong with anesthesia, the most important facts may be scattered:
- pre-op screening notes and consent documents
- anesthesia charting and medication administration timing
- monitor trends and alarm events during induction and recovery
- handoff notes between anesthesia providers and nursing staff
- discharge summaries and follow-up instructions
When those pieces don’t line up, it can look to an insurer like there’s no “proof.” In reality, the proof is there—if someone reconstructs the timeline and asks the right questions.


