Glens Falls and nearby communities rely on a mix of local providers, referral specialists, and follow-up care across different offices. That can create a common problem in anesthesia-related injury matters:
- Your immediate treatment may be split across locations, making it harder to connect what happened in the OR to what was discovered later.
- Records sometimes arrive in pieces (operative notes first, then anesthesia records, then post-op follow-ups), and gaps can matter.
- Family caregivers often become the “record keepers”—collecting discharge papers, appointment summaries, and symptom updates—which is helpful, but it’s also easy to miss what attorneys and experts need.
When anesthesia mistakes or failures to respond occur, the evidence is rarely found in one document. It’s usually found in the timeline—what was monitored, when medication was administered, how quickly abnormal readings were addressed, and what was communicated.


