Surgery records don’t just “exist”—they’re stored, routed, and sometimes archived. In practice, the sooner you start, the better your chances of obtaining:
- the anesthesia record and intraoperative monitoring printouts (or exports)
- medication administration logs and dosage records
- nursing notes, handoff summaries, and post-op assessments
- documentation of any abnormal vitals and the response time
That matters because many serious anesthesia-related injuries are tied to events that unfolded in minutes—especially when a patient was sedated, intubated, transferred between care areas, or monitored under fast workflow conditions.


