Utah hospitals and surgical centers increasingly rely on electronic charting, automated prompts, and documentation systems that can streamline care. That can be helpful—but it can also create problems when:
- anesthesia medication times don’t line up cleanly with monitor events,
- chart entries are delayed or corrected after the fact,
- handoffs between staff aren’t fully reflected in the record,
- discharge summaries summarize the situation without capturing minute-by-minute changes.
When people look for an anesthesia malpractice attorney after an “AI-assisted” workflow, they’re often really asking a practical question: What parts of the record matter most, and how do we prove what happened?
Our role is to organize the timeline in a way that insurers and medical experts can evaluate—using the records you already have, plus targeted requests for what’s missing.


