In real-world Snyder cases, people often describe a pattern like this:
- A surgery happened around a busy hospital schedule, and later the patient noticed symptoms that didn’t match what they were told to expect.
- The anesthesia record is hard to follow—charts, medication logs, and monitor notes don’t seem to line up.
- A family member learns that “technology” was used for documentation or decision support, but they’re not sure whether it improved safety or created gaps.
Our job is to focus the investigation on the details that insurers challenge: what the records show, what they omit, and whether the care met Texas standards for anesthesia monitoring and response.


