In a suburban community like New Albany, many people go to the ER because they’re trying to be safe—chest discomfort after a commute, injuries from weekend activities, sudden dizziness, or symptoms that feel “manageable” until they worsen. The concern in malpractice cases isn’t that a bad outcome happened. It’s whether the ER responded appropriately to the level of risk shown at the time.
When triage or early evaluation underestimates urgency, patients can lose critical time. That matters for conditions where minutes can affect outcomes—such as stroke symptoms, serious infection, internal bleeding, serious allergic reactions, and heart-related emergencies.


