Emergency departments serve people coming from surrounding neighborhoods and nearby routes, and that can change the practical realities of an ER visit—crowding, transport delays, and the need to triage quickly when symptoms evolve.
In Dunmore, we often see negligence questions arise from scenarios like:
- Delayed evaluation during high-traffic hours (for example, after evening commutes or during bad-weather travel when more patients present with urgent complaints)
- Missed red flags in high-risk symptoms (chest pain, stroke-like symptoms, severe abdominal pain, breathing trouble)
- Discharge decisions that don’t match the patient’s condition—including return precautions that may be inadequate given what was documented
- Medication and testing problems that can happen under time pressure—such as incorrect dosing, allergy-related oversight, or failure to act on abnormal results
If your loved one was sent home and symptoms worsened, or if follow-up care revealed complications that appear tied to the ER course, you may have grounds to investigate whether the standard of care was breached.


