Mint Hill patients and families often describe similar patterns after an emergency visit—especially when symptoms worsen after leaving the hospital.
Some of the most common situations we see include:
- Triage underestimation for urgent complaints (for example, rapidly changing symptoms that should have prompted a higher level of review)
- Delayed or missed diagnosis when the initial presentation could have supported a faster workup
- Testing or imaging issues—including delays in ordering, performing, or acting on results
- Medication-related problems such as wrong dosing, failure to account for allergies, or incomplete reconciliation of home prescriptions
- Discharge instructions that don’t match the risk level, leading to avoidable deterioration
Every case turns on the specifics, but the theme is consistent: what happened in the emergency department matters most—and that includes timing.


