Emergency rooms across Mercer County often handle a wide mix of cases—routine injuries, chronic-condition flare-ups, and urgent, fast-moving emergencies. In Trenton, we frequently see negligence allegations arise from issues like:
- Delayed evaluation during busy shifts: When triage is overwhelmed, patients with serious symptoms can wait longer than they should for clinician assessment.
- Missed warning signs in crowded waiting rooms: Some conditions require rapid action, but the urgency can be misread when symptoms change while a patient is waiting.
- Discharge decisions that don’t match the risk: A patient may leave with instructions that don’t reflect the severity of what the ER documented.
- Medication and allergy problems: ER charts may show medication lists, but errors can occur in what was ordered, what was administered, or what was communicated.
- Follow-up failures after abnormal test results: Labs and imaging sometimes reveal red flags that should trigger additional evaluation or timely communication.
These aren’t “bad outcomes” by themselves. They’re the kinds of failures that can form the basis of an ER malpractice claim when they fall below what competent emergency providers would do under similar circumstances.


