Emergency room cases aren’t only about misdiagnosis. In Albany-area hospitals, negligence allegations often come down to timing, communication, and follow-through—especially when symptoms worsen after discharge or when patients struggle to navigate aftercare.
Some situations we commonly review include:
- Delayed evaluation after triage: Symptoms that should have triggered rapid assessment weren’t matched with the right urgency.
- Missed red flags for time-sensitive conditions: Examples include serious infections, internal bleeding, stroke symptoms, or dangerous cardiac presentations.
- Medication and allergy errors: Wrong dose, contraindications, or failures to account for allergies and interactions.
- Discharge planning that doesn’t match the risks: Discharge instructions may fail to reflect severity, lack clear return precautions, or omit key follow-up steps.
- Abnormal test results not acted on quickly enough: Lab or imaging findings that should have changed treatment or prompted escalation weren’t addressed.
If you’re dealing with the aftermath of an ER visit—especially if the harm worsened soon after discharge—your first questions should be: What exactly did the ER do (and not do), and how does the record connect to what happened afterward?


