In central Florida, many people cycle between home, outpatient visits, ERs, and follow-ups—sometimes across different facilities. That’s exactly where problems can surface:
- ER-to-inpatient handoff issues: important symptoms or abnormal vitals aren’t clearly communicated when care transitions.
- Medication changes during busy shifts: dose adjustments, timing, and allergy checks can get lost when there’s a high patient volume.
- Delayed imaging or escalation: symptoms worsen, but the next step in testing or specialty consultation doesn’t happen quickly enough.
- Discharge follow-up gaps: patients leave with instructions that don’t match their risk level, leading to preventable complications.
These scenarios don’t automatically mean negligence—but they are the kinds of facts an attorney can evaluate against the standard of care.


