Anesthesia problems don’t always look dramatic in the moment. Many families first notice symptoms later—sometimes days after surgery—such as prolonged confusion, severe nausea, breathing or oxygenation concerns in recovery, unexpected weakness, nerve pain, or ongoing cognitive “fog.”
Because many Bainbridge Island residents receive care at larger facilities across the water, it’s common for the “story” to be split across:
- pre-op testing notes and consent forms,
- intraoperative anesthesia records,
- PACU/recovery monitoring documentation,
- follow-up visits back on the island.
That split matters legally. If the timeline is incomplete or inconsistent across systems, it becomes harder to explain how an anesthesia-related lapse contributed to the injury.


