In a rural community like Prineville, follow-up care often involves multiple visits, referrals, and travel for specialists. That can make it harder to connect the dots between the operating room and what happens afterward.
Common patterns we see include:
- Delayed complications that appear after discharge—such as worsening respiratory symptoms, severe nausea, or cognitive changes that family members notice at home.
- Medication-related harm where the outcome doesn’t match what you were told to expect.
- Second opinions and urgent returns to care after problems weren’t recognized quickly enough.
Even when clinicians act during the procedure, the legal question becomes whether the standard of care was met in monitoring, response, dosing, airway management, and handoffs.


