In and around Rockville, many surgeries involve coordinated care across hospitals, outpatient centers, and specialty clinics. That can make mistakes harder to spot at first—especially when care transitions occur quickly between pre-op, operating room, PACU (recovery), and follow-up.
Common ways anesthesia-related harm is reported include:
- Delayed recognition of breathing or oxygen issues after sedation or during recovery
- Medication dosing or infusion timing problems that affect stability and recovery
- Monitoring or alarm response failures (including when vitals don’t match charted events)
- Airway management issues during procedures
- Post-op neurologic or nerve symptoms—sometimes overlooked early because they appear “unrelated” to anesthesia
If you’re thinking, “How could this happen in a modern facility?”—it’s a fair question. But the legal focus is on whether the care met the Maryland standard of reasonable anesthesia management for the circumstances and whether it contributed to your injury.


