Emergency care is built for speed, but speed can create risk when symptoms aren’t treated with the urgency they deserve. In coastal communities and regional travel corridors like Groton and southeastern Connecticut, it’s common for people to arrive at the ER after:
- a long drive from nearby towns for care,
- an injury that happened during weekend outings or family events,
- worsening symptoms over the evening hours when staffing and imaging availability can be strained,
- complicated histories (including medications) that aren’t fully captured at triage.
If an ER team missed a diagnosis, delayed critical testing, or didn’t act on abnormal results, it can lead to preventable harm. The key for a malpractice claim is tying the alleged mistake to the patient’s specific medical course—not just pointing to a bad outcome.


