In Millville, many people drive in for care, then return home to manage recovery. That transition is where problems often become visible:
- Symptoms that worsened after discharge (pain, breathing issues, infection signs, neurological symptoms)
- Follow-up instructions that weren’t followed—or weren’t clear
- Abnormal test results that weren’t acted on, communicated, or escalated appropriately
- Medication issues such as incorrect dosing, allergy-related errors, or failure to account for existing prescriptions
A bad outcome alone isn’t proof of malpractice. The question is whether the emergency team’s decisions matched what competent providers would do under similar conditions—and whether those decisions contributed to the harm.


