Every emergency department case has its own facts, but Lindon residents often describe the same “setup” problems—arriving after symptoms escalate at home, then getting processed quickly due to crowding and competing priorities.
You may have a claim if your ER visit involved issues like:
- Discharge that didn’t match your symptoms. For example, you were sent home after incomplete evaluation, then got worse soon after.
- Triage delays during peak hours. Busy times can affect how quickly a patient is moved from intake to urgent assessment.
- Medication or allergy oversights. In urgent settings, the record must clearly reflect allergies, current prescriptions, and dosing decisions.
- Abnormal results that weren’t acted on. Imaging or lab findings should be reviewed and communicated appropriately.
- Follow-up instructions that were unsafe. If the plan didn’t fit your risk level, the consequences can be severe.
If any of these sound familiar, don’t assume you’re “stuck” with the outcome. ER negligence claims are built on evidence—especially the chart, the timeline, and what competent emergency providers would have done.


