In a smaller community like Yankton, you may think the process will be straightforward—until you try to obtain anesthesia charts, medication records, or complete follow-up documentation. Even when care was provided by reputable clinicians, gaps can appear from:
- delayed record retrieval or incomplete copies to patients
- charting that’s hard to connect to monitor trends
- communication breakdowns between providers during transfer or handoff
When an anesthesia incident leads to ongoing symptoms—such as cognitive changes, lingering nerve pain, persistent nausea, or respiratory problems—your legal strategy depends on whether the objective record supports the timing and cause of the harm.


