In many Daphne cases, the harm doesn’t end when you leave the facility. Patients may be discharged after an emergency visit, observation period, or surgery, then later experience worsening symptoms at home—especially when follow-up care is delayed or instructions are difficult to follow.
That timing matters legally and medically. If the chart shows a patient was sent home despite red-flag symptoms, or if discharge instructions were unclear or not aligned with the patient’s condition, it can shape how negligence and causation are evaluated.
What we often see in the Gulf Coast area:
- Worsening symptoms after returning home (fever, breathing issues, uncontrolled pain, medication complications)
- Follow-up that didn’t happen fast enough because instructions were vague or the plan required coordination the patient couldn’t reasonably complete
- Care gaps between departments (ER → inpatient → discharge, or inpatient → outpatient)


