In Madison, many families are used to quick access to care—urgent symptoms, follow-up visits, and referrals that happen fast. When a patient deteriorates or doesn’t improve as expected, families often point to a few common “early signals”:
- Care transitions that felt rushed (ER to inpatient, hospital to rehab, or discharge to home)
- Test results that seemed delayed or not acted on
- Communication breakdowns between departments (nursing, hospitalists, specialists, imaging)
- Medication changes that occurred without clear reconciliation or monitoring
These details matter because negligence claims are usually won—or lost—on timing and documentation: what was known, what should have been done next, and whether the delay or omission contributed to the harm.


