Many emergency room mistakes aren’t obvious in the moment. They show up later—when symptoms worsen, when imaging results don’t match the discharge plan, or when follow-up care reveals a condition that should have been addressed sooner.
In Forest Acres, common scenarios we see include:
- Delayed evaluation of symptoms reported during peak hours, when waiting rooms are full and triage decisions carry extra weight.
- Discharge plans that don’t fit the risk level—for example, when return precautions are unclear or when follow-up instructions don’t reflect the patient’s presentation.
- Medication-related issues, such as dosing problems, allergy mismatches, or failure to consider interactions with medications residents commonly take for chronic conditions.
- Test and results mishandling, including abnormal lab or imaging findings that were not acted on promptly.
What you should do now (if you can):
- Request copies of triage notes, discharge paperwork, medication lists, imaging reports, and lab results.
- Write down a timeline while it’s fresh: symptom onset, what you told staff, how long you waited, what was ordered, and what you were told at discharge.
- Keep receipts and records of post-ER care (follow-ups, specialists, physical therapy, prescriptions). These documents often drive settlement value.


