Washington medical negligence cases are time-sensitive, and hospitals and providers often respond quickly after an incident. In practice, that means evidence needs to be preserved early—especially anesthesia charts, medication administration records, monitor strips/data, paging/communication logs, and post-anesthesia notes.
Kent patients frequently face a similar problem: they leave the facility with discharge paperwork that’s focused on treatment, not proof. Later, when symptoms persist or worsen, families start requesting records—only to discover gaps, delays, or “system migrations” that make it harder to reconstruct what happened.
That’s why early legal guidance matters: it can help you request the right documents in the right way and identify what’s missing before missing records become a bigger obstacle.


