In the hours after an ER visit, it’s common for patients to assume the discharge instructions mean everything is fine. In reality, the most important “proof” in many Ohio emergency malpractice matters is created early—often in small details.
If you can, gather and write down:
- The timing of symptoms (when they started, what changed, and how long you waited before asking for help)
- What you reported to triage (pain level, breathing trouble, weakness/numbness, dizziness, bleeding, fever, or other red flags)
- The exact tests and results you were told about (X-ray, CT, labs, EKG, etc.)
- Medications given in the ER and any allergy information that was referenced
- Follow-up instructions and whether you tried to follow them
North Canton residents frequently travel between local medical providers and follow-up appointments quickly—so the sooner you preserve records and timelines, the easier it is to evaluate whether the ER course of care matched what competent emergency clinicians would have done.


