Orem patients are commonly treated at regional hospitals and surgical centers where anesthesia teams coordinate with nursing staff, pre-op workflows, and post-op monitoring on tight schedules. When the outcome is serious—such as oxygenation problems, medication-related complications, nerve injury, prolonged cognitive changes, or unexpected ICU transfer—the case typically turns on a narrow window:
- what the monitor showed and when
- how quickly abnormal vitals were recognized
- whether anesthesia dosing matched the patient’s changing status
- what was charted (and what wasn’t)
- whether handoffs between team members were clearly documented
In settlement talks, defense teams often argue that the chart is “close enough” or that symptoms were unrelated. Our job is to show—using the objective timeline—that the anesthesia-related care fell below the accepted standard of care and contributed to the injury.


