While every case is different, residents in and around Logansport often run into similar problems after ER visits. These are the situations we look closely at when evaluating whether negligence may have occurred:
- Symptoms that should have prompted faster escalation: For example, patients arriving with chest pain, stroke-like signs, severe shortness of breath, or serious abdominal pain—then experiencing delays in diagnostics or clinician reassessment.
- Discharge instructions that don’t fit the risk level: A patient may leave with “watchful waiting” instructions but later deteriorate, especially when follow-up is difficult due to scheduling, transportation, or work constraints.
- Medication and allergy issues during high-volume visits: Errors can happen when patients are overwhelmed, records are incomplete, or medication reconciliation is rushed.
- Transfer or handoff problems: If care changes after the ER visit—such as transfer to another facility or a rapid referral—what was documented in the ER record becomes crucial.
If you’ve been told the outcome was “just how things go,” we examine whether the ER team made reasonable clinical decisions based on what they knew at the time.


