Kenner residents often end up in the ER under time pressure—whether it’s after a long commute, a late-night trip home, or symptoms that seemed minor at first. Emergency departments are designed to triage quickly, but certain failure patterns show up repeatedly in cases involving delayed recognition.
Common scenarios include:
- Triage that doesn’t match the risk level (vital sign changes not escalated, symptoms not treated as time-sensitive)
- Discharge decisions made without adequate follow-up planning (return precautions that don’t align with the risk)
- Missed or delayed diagnostic testing (imaging or labs not ordered when symptoms warranted it)
- Abnormal results not acted on (tests returned after the patient leaves, but no appropriate next steps)
- Medication and allergy issues (wrong dose, incomplete medication reconciliation, or failure to consider interactions)
Even when an ER visit is stressful and fast-moving, negligence allegations turn on what competent emergency providers would have done with the information available at the time.


