In a community where many residents commute and juggle family schedules, it’s common for the story of the incident to be fragmented: symptoms start after a shift, a family member drives you in, and you may be tired, anxious, or in pain when you’re triaged.
That’s exactly why timing and documentation matter so much in ER malpractice cases.
We look for issues such as:
- charting that doesn’t match the symptoms you reported
- delayed evaluation after changing vital signs
- orders placed but not completed (or completed but not acted on)
- discharge instructions that didn’t align with the risk level at the time
Those are not “paperwork problems.” In Florida medical negligence cases, the records often become the primary evidence of what the ER team knew—and what it should have done next.


