Emergency room negligence claims often start with situations that look “routine” until they aren’t. In Endicott and the Southern Tier region, these patterns can be especially relevant:
- Symptoms dismissed during high-stress shifts: If the ER was busy and a patient with serious symptoms was routed through lower-acuity flow, delays in evaluation can increase risk.
- Medication and allergy issues: People often arrive after taking over-the-counter meds, prescriptions, or recent antibiotics. When allergies or medication histories aren’t properly reconciled, treatment errors can occur.
- Return visits and worsening symptoms: A discharge plan that fails to account for evolving symptoms can lead to deterioration—and later medical providers may document that the earlier workup was insufficient.
- Missed or delayed imaging/lab follow-through: When imaging or lab results are not ordered correctly, not acted on promptly, or not communicated clearly, the harm may not be obvious at discharge.
These are not “bad outcomes” by themselves. A strong case is built around whether the care fell below the accepted standard under the circumstances—and whether that lapse contributed to the injury.


