In a community like Kingston—where patients may receive pre-op care at one facility and post-op treatment at another—anesthesia injuries can become harder to explain when records are scattered. It’s not unusual for patients to discover that:
- monitor trends and anesthetic charts are stored differently than nursing notes
- medication administration details are incomplete or harder to interpret
- discharge summaries don’t fully reflect what symptoms began afterward
When insurers push back, the dispute often isn’t about whether you were harmed—it’s about when the critical events occurred and whether the care team met the expected standard. An evidence-first approach helps bring clarity to the timeline before negotiations stall.


