In suburban communities like New Providence, many surgeries happen at hospitals or outpatient centers where families commute in and out, and follow-up care may be spread across providers. That can create a common problem: the anesthesia story is documented across multiple systems, dates, and portals.
When something goes wrong—such as delayed recognition of breathing problems in recovery, medication timing mismatches, or charting that doesn’t line up with monitor trends—your claim usually depends on one thing: a defensible timeline. A small gap can become a major dispute later.
A lawyer’s job is to build that timeline from the documents that exist (and to request what’s missing) so insurers can’t dismiss the case as “unclear.”


