In the Farmington area, many patients are treated in busy regional facilities and surgical centers where care transitions happen quickly. That can be medically appropriate—but it also means small documentation problems can create big misunderstandings later.
Common patterns we see in local cases include:
- Monitoring data and narrative notes that don’t line up (e.g., vital sign trends documented one way, symptoms described another way)
- Medication administration timing that is unclear because the chart is dense or spans multiple systems
- Handoff gaps between anesthesia providers, nursing staff, recovery teams, or covering clinicians
- Delayed recognition of complications where the record shows action occurred later than what a reasonable clinician would have done
When you’re asking, “What exactly happened during my surgery and recovery?” the answer usually depends on minute-by-minute documentation. Our role is to turn that documentation into a usable legal timeline.


