In suburban communities across Camden County, it’s common for ER visits to happen after a long day—someone gets symptoms on the way home, waits for evaluation, or is sent home with instructions that later prove inadequate.
In these situations, alleged negligence often centers on issues like:
- Triage urgency: symptoms that should have been treated as time-sensitive weren’t categorized or escalated quickly enough.
- Medication and allergy handling: errors can occur when histories are incomplete, documentation is inconsistent, or orders aren’t verified.
- Follow-through on abnormal results: a lab or imaging finding may be documented but not acted on with the urgency the situation required.
- Discharge planning: instructions and return precautions may not match the patient’s risk level—leading to avoidable deterioration.
No one expects ER staff to have perfect information at the first moment. But negligence claims focus on whether the care provided fell below what competent emergency providers would do under similar circumstances.


