Many anesthesia injury cases in South Carolina don’t start with a dramatic headline—they start with details that later don’t add up. In Orangeburg and surrounding areas, residents often report situations like:
- Outpatient or same-day procedures where the patient initially seems “okay,” then returns to care after sedation-related complications emerge.
- Medication administration timing disputes—for example, where charting and monitor history don’t reconcile, especially after the patient is moved between pre-op, procedure, and recovery.
- Delayed escalation after abnormal vitals—such as respiratory concerns or unexpected blood pressure/oxygen changes during surgery or early recovery.
- Care handoff confusion between nursing staff, anesthesia providers, and recovery teams, leaving gaps in who observed what and when.
- Documentation problems after system changes (including transcription delays or missing pages), which can make it harder to reconstruct a minute-by-minute timeline.
These are the types of facts that matter in negotiations—because they can point to a breach of the standard of care rather than a one-off misfortune.


