Emergency room malpractice claims are highly fact-specific, but certain patterns appear often in communities like Keene where patients may arrive from home, work, or while traveling through the area.
You may have grounds to ask a lawyer to review your case if, for example:
- Symptoms were treated as “routine” when they required immediate escalation (especially when a patient reported worsening symptoms before or during triage).
- A potentially serious condition was overlooked because the initial presentation was incomplete or the documentation didn’t capture key details.
- Tests were ordered or resulted in a way that wasn’t acted on promptly, such as abnormal imaging or lab results that weren’t properly communicated and followed up.
- Medication errors occurred—wrong dose, wrong drug, or failure to account for allergies and prior medication history.
- Discharge instructions didn’t match the patient’s risk level, leading to a preventable decline after leaving the ER.
Even if the outcome was severe, negligence is not automatically assumed. The question is whether the providers’ decisions matched what competent emergency clinicians would do under similar circumstances.


