Wildwood patients often seek emergency care for issues that require quick decision-making—problems where small timing errors can have big consequences.
Some of the situations we see most often include:
- Delayed evaluation during peak demand: When the ER is busy, patients may wait longer for reassessment, repeat vitals, or specialist input.
- Missed or delayed stroke/heart concerns: Symptoms that need immediate escalation—like one-sided weakness, severe headache, chest pressure, or shortness of breath—must be treated as time-sensitive.
- Medication and allergy mix-ups: ER charts can reflect incomplete histories, and errors may occur with dosing, contraindications, or discharge prescriptions.
- Worsening injuries after discharge: Some patients leave with return precautions, but the plan may not match the risks shown by test results.
- Diagnostic gaps tied to follow-up instructions: If the ER notes suggest a condition that should trigger closer monitoring, insufficient instructions can contribute to harm.
These are not “bad outcomes” cases. They’re cases where the standard of emergency care may not have been met—and where that failure can be linked to measurable injury.


