Every case has its own facts, but Lake Mary ER malpractice claims often start with patterns we see in real emergency settings—particularly when patients are dealing with time-sensitive symptoms.
1) “Wait-and-see” during worsening symptoms
If symptoms were potentially serious (for example, stroke-like signs, severe breathing issues, chest pain, or serious infections), an underestimation of urgency can make the difference between early intervention and preventable deterioration.
2) Imaging or lab results not acted on quickly
In many emergency cases, the critical issue isn’t whether tests were ordered—it’s whether abnormal results were reviewed, communicated, and followed up with the right next step.
3) Medication decisions that don’t match the patient’s history
Medication errors can involve dosing mistakes, failure to account for allergies, or unsafe choices given a patient’s medical background.
4) Discharge instructions that don’t match the risk level
When a discharge plan doesn’t reflect the patient’s presenting condition or recommended follow-up doesn’t happen in time, harm can continue after the ER visit.


