Modern anesthesia care doesn’t always look the same from one case to another. Some providers use electronic charting systems, automated medication entry, decision-support tools, or “smart” documentation features that pull data from monitors and templates.
That can be helpful—until it isn’t.
If you’ve been told the chart is complete, but the story doesn’t match how your symptoms developed, a careful review may uncover issues such as:
- monitor readings that don’t align with narrative notes,
- medication timing that appears inconsistent with vitals,
- delayed addenda that change the meaning of earlier events,
- handoff gaps between anesthesia staff and recovery/unit teams.
The key point for Sanford patients: technology may generate records, but it doesn’t replace accountability. The legal question remains whether the care met the standard of a reasonably careful anesthesia provider under similar circumstances—and whether deviations caused injury.


