In a coastal Michigan community, many patients return for follow-ups with local providers or travel to specialists after discharge. That means the injury story can stretch across offices, imaging centers, and therapy appointments.
But the core evidence in an anesthesia claim is usually created in a narrow window:
- what happened during induction and maintenance
- how ventilation and oxygenation were monitored
- medication timing and dose documentation
- responses to abnormal vitals and changes in patient status
- handoffs between anesthesia and nursing teams
When the chart is hard to interpret—or appears inconsistent—investigation becomes more than “reading documents.” It’s building a credible timeline that shows what the team knew, when they should have acted, and how the patient’s condition evolved.


