In Logan, many ER visits involve patients who arrive after commuting, school activities, construction shifts, or outdoor recreation. That’s not unusual—but it can create documentation pressure points.
Our experience reviewing ER negligence claims shows that these cases commonly hinge on questions like:
- Was the patient triaged as urgent enough for the symptoms reported?
- Do the vitals, symptoms, and clinician notes show a consistent timeline?
- Were critical results acted on promptly (imaging, labs, abnormal findings)?
- Did the discharge plan match what the patient presented with?
Even when an ER outcome is bad, negligence is not automatic. The key is whether the care decisions were reasonable given what the staff knew at the time—and whether the delay or error contributed to the harm.


