In suburban communities like Woodbury, people often come to the ER after trying to manage symptoms at home—sometimes for hours, sometimes overnight. That can make the emergency timeline critical, because the “story” in the chart may not fully reflect what you told staff, how quickly symptoms changed, or what you were advised to do next.
Common issues we see in ER negligence cases include:
- Triage and urgency mismatches: Symptoms that should prompt rapid evaluation are sometimes placed into a lower-acuity pathway, especially when patients present “intermittent” symptoms.
- Discharge and follow-up failures: A discharge plan that doesn’t reflect risk factors can lead to preventable deterioration.
- Medication and allergy documentation problems: Errors can occur when histories are incomplete or when allergies and prior prescriptions aren’t accurately captured.
- Test result handling: Lab and imaging results may not be acted on promptly, or abnormal findings may not trigger appropriate reassessment.
When these mistakes occur, the fight is usually over what was known at the time and what should have happened next—not just whether an injury occurred.


