Tigard residents often undergo care across multiple local settings—ambulatory surgery centers, hospital outpatient departments, and follow-up visits with different clinicians. That can create a common problem: the story gets fragmented.
You may have:
- anesthesia charts that don’t match the discharge narrative,
- follow-up appointments scheduled days later when symptoms were already escalating,
- medication changes documented after the fact,
- gaps between monitor events and what was charted.
In Oregon, insurers may argue that the complication was inevitable or pre-existing. A local legal strategy helps connect the dots using the medical record—particularly the parts that are time-sensitive and heavily relied on in negotiations.


