While every case is different, Union City patients often experience ER complications that follow recognizable patterns. These typically include:
- Delayed evaluation during peak hours: When symptoms suggest a time-sensitive condition, waiting too long for labs, imaging, or escalation can lead to preventable harm.
- Triage category problems: A patient may be placed in a lower-acuity queue despite red-flag symptoms—especially when the presenting complaint is vague or the patient is unable to fully explain symptoms.
- “Return precautions” that weren’t enough: Discharge instructions can be appropriate, but when a clinician reasonably should have suspected a serious condition, inadequate follow-up guidance can contribute to worsening.
- Medication and monitoring gaps: Errors involving dosage, allergy/interaction checks, or failure to respond to deteriorating vital signs can turn a treatable issue into a lasting injury.
- Communication breakdowns: Missing or unclear documentation (what was heard, what was ordered, what was actually done, and when) can create serious evidentiary problems later.
If any of these sound familiar, the next step is not guessing—it’s reviewing the record for what the hospital actually knew, when it knew it, and what it did (or didn’t do) in response.


