In the Alabaster area, many people don’t arrive at the ER with a clean timeline. They may have waited at home, driven themselves from the neighborhood, or relied on family members to describe symptoms. That’s especially true when the injury happened during busy commute hours or after a local event.
Those gaps matter legally.
In emergency room malpractice claims, the question is not just what happened—it’s what should have been done, when, given the patient’s complaints, vitals, and risk factors at the time of triage and assessment.
If you were discharged with instructions that didn’t match your condition, or if tests were delayed while symptoms were progressing, the “when” often becomes the centerpiece of the case.


