While every case is different, residents in Wabash often describe patterns that we see in emergency negligence claims:
- Delayed evaluation of symptoms that worsen quickly. People may arrive with pain, breathing issues, neurologic symptoms, or infection signs that require rapid escalation.
- Discharge that doesn’t match the risk. Sometimes the paperwork says “return if worse,” but the ER course fails to identify the need for observation, follow-up, or additional testing.
- Medication or allergy problems. Errors can involve the wrong drug choice, incorrect dosage, or failing to account for allergies and prior prescriptions.
- Abnormal test results not acted on. A lab value or imaging result may indicate a serious condition, but the next steps may be unclear or delayed.
- Triage timing issues during busy hours. When the ER is handling more patients than usual—especially during evenings, weekends, or after weather-related travel—documentation of vitals, reassessments, and escalation decisions can become the critical evidence.
If you recognize any of these themes in your ER visit, you may be able to explore a legal claim—depending on what the record shows and whether the care fell below the accepted standard.


