In Franklin, the post-surgery process often involves multiple providers: the surgeon’s office, the hospital system, recovery clinicians, and sometimes outside therapists or neurologists. That can be helpful for care—but it can also create gaps in the paper trail.
If the anesthesia record is incomplete, hard to interpret, or inconsistent across systems, the defense may argue the injury wasn’t connected to the perioperative event. A local-focused approach matters because your claim depends on how quickly you can gather the specific documents tied to your procedure date and your follow-up course.
Early legal steps typically focus on:
- preserving anesthesia charts and medication administration records from the exact surgery date
- obtaining post-op assessments tied to your symptoms
- documenting when symptoms began and how they progressed after discharge


