In Whittier, families often discover problems after the fact—when symptoms worsen, follow-up care doesn’t match the discharge plan, or a timeline doesn’t add up. By then, the hospital’s initial explanation may already be documented, and staff may reference “protocol” or “standard procedure.”
What matters most is what the chart shows:
- the sequence of assessments and monitoring
- when abnormal results were reviewed
- whether escalation happened when it should have
- how medication decisions were documented
- what discharge instructions were given and whether they were consistent with the patient’s condition
A lawyer’s job is to connect the record to California legal requirements for negligence—especially breach of the standard of care and causation—so you can pursue accountability with clarity.


