Watervliet patients often need emergency care in time-sensitive situations: injuries after commuting, slip-and-fall incidents, acute illnesses that escalate overnight, and urgent symptoms that can be easy to misread when someone is in pain or frightened.
In these moments, emergency clinicians work under pressure—but pressure doesn’t eliminate the duty to assess risk correctly. Many ER malpractice claims in our region begin with one of these local-feeling scenarios:
- Triage confusion when symptoms are reported in a confusing order (common after a long day of work or travel)
- Delayed diagnostic follow-through when initial tests are abnormal or symptoms evolve after discharge paperwork is given
- Medication and allergy issues that can be especially harmful for patients who take prescriptions regularly
- Discharge or return-instructions problems, where the written plan doesn’t match what a reasonable provider would have advised for the same risk level
Our role is to translate what happened in the ER into legal questions that insurers and defense counsel must answer—using the medical record as the backbone.


