In a suburban community like Princeton, many people arrive at the ER after a long drive, after waiting too long at home, or after symptoms escalated during a busy schedule. That doesn’t excuse substandard care. But it does mean the case often hinges on:
- How quickly symptoms were acted on (triage category, vitals, and escalation decisions)
- Whether clinicians documented red flags tied to Texas emergency standards
- Whether follow-up instructions matched the risk presented at discharge
Even when the outcome is severe, the question is not “did something go wrong?” It’s whether the ER team met the accepted standard of care for the presenting condition and whether any breach contributed to the harm.


