In the Owasso community, many patients are active and healthy before surgery—then face unexpected complications that derail normal routines. Common scenarios we see from families include:
- Delayed recognition after sedation: abnormal breathing or oxygen levels that weren’t acted on quickly enough.
- Medication dosing or timing problems: dosing that doesn’t match the patient’s response, leading to extended sedation, severe nausea, or other complications.
- Recovery-room miscommunication: handoff gaps between surgical staff and recovery nurses/anesthesia providers.
- Documentation gaps that affect clarity: charts that are incomplete, hard to follow, or don’t line up cleanly with monitor data.
Even when everyone involved acted urgently, the legal question is whether the care met the expected standard—and whether the outcome was worsened by preventable delays or errors.


