In and around Fairmont, many patients come from rural homes and nearby communities—often after a long drive in snow, ice, or blowing wind. That matters because emergency decisions are built around what providers knew at the time and how symptoms presented.
Common Fairmont-area scenarios we see that can lead to disputes about whether care was appropriate include:
- Delayed evaluation of stroke- or heart-related symptoms after a patient (or caregiver) tried to “wait it out” due to weather or transportation limits.
- Triage challenges when patients arrive with multiple complaints (pain, dizziness, breathing issues) and the record doesn’t clearly show the escalation plan.
- Discharge follow-through problems—for example, when discharge instructions don’t match the severity of symptoms documented in the ER.
Even if the clinic or hospital was busy, negligence is still negligence. The question for your case is whether the team responded with the level of care expected for the situation.


