Many ER negligence disputes start the same way: the chart looks “reasonable” at first glance, but the timeline tells a different story. In practice, the problems we see most often in the Southfield area tend to involve:
- Under-triage during busy periods (patients with escalating symptoms not reassessed closely enough)
- Missed or delayed follow-up on abnormal labs or imaging
- Discharge that didn’t account for risk factors documented during the visit
- Medication safety errors (wrong dose, incorrect route, allergy conflicts, or failure to reconcile meds)
- Documentation gaps that make it difficult to confirm what was actually considered or communicated
These issues matter because emergency medicine is time-critical. If the record shows that risk should have been recognized earlier—or acted on more urgently—the law may treat that as negligence when it causes harm.


