In the Peekskill area, many patients receive care at regional hospitals and surgical centers and then return home to continue follow-up with local providers. That means the story can get fragmented across multiple settings: pre-op visits, the day-of anesthesia record, discharge paperwork, and later outpatient documentation.
When an insurer later asks for specifics—what changed, when it changed, and how it connects to the injury—the answer usually comes from the anesthesia chart, medication administration record, and post-op notes. If any of those documents are delayed, incomplete, or don’t match the objective monitoring data, the case often becomes a fight over what the records actually show.
Our job is to organize the evidence early so you’re not forced to guess what matters most.


