Emergency departments serve a wide range of patients—construction workers with work-related injuries, families traveling with kids, and residents who delay care because they’re trying to manage daily responsibilities. In that environment, malpractice allegations often involve:
- Discharge decisions that don’t match the seriousness of symptoms (for example, sending a patient home when close monitoring or re-evaluation was warranted)
- Delayed imaging or testing after a patient reports symptoms tied to urgent conditions
- Triage inaccuracies that can affect how quickly a provider sees a patient
- Medication problems, including incorrect dosing or failure to account for known allergies
- Missed red flags in vital signs or lab results
These concerns aren’t about “what went wrong” in hindsight. They’re about whether the ER team acted reasonably based on what they knew at the time.


