While every claim depends on its own medical timeline, Kingston residents often describe patterns that show up in ER records—especially when patients arrive after a long drive, during peak travel times, or after symptoms worsen overnight.
Common issues include:
- Triage delays when symptoms are serious but initially presented as “routine” (for example, severe abdominal pain, shortness of breath, stroke-like symptoms, or chest discomfort)
- Missed or delayed diagnostics where tests weren’t ordered promptly, weren’t interpreted correctly, or abnormal results weren’t escalated
- Treatment and medication errors such as incorrect dosing, failure to account for allergies, or not following up after a medication reaction
- Monitoring and reassessment gaps—when vital signs change, the chart should reflect timely evaluation and appropriate action
- Discharge and follow-up breakdowns, including return precautions that don’t match the patient’s risk level
In Kingston, these issues can be compounded by real-world circumstances—limited ability to communicate symptoms clearly, a caregiver rushing to transport someone in acute distress, or waiting while the ER is busy. Those factors don’t excuse negligence, but they make documentation and timing more important.


