In Central Florida, hospital stays are frequently interrupted by transfers between units, specialty consultations, outpatient follow-ups, and discharge planning that happens quickly. For many families in Sanford, the first sign of a potential problem isn’t a diagnosis—it’s the sense that the story being told doesn’t match what happened.
Common ways this shows up locally:
- Discharge happens before symptoms stabilize, especially when follow-up appointments are delayed or prescriptions are confusing.
- Test results appear later in the chart, but no one can clearly explain how they were acted on in real time.
- Care is handed off multiple times (ER → inpatient → specialty service), and the handoff documentation doesn’t clearly show who knew what and when.
When that “timeline gap” exists, a claim often turns on records—specifically what was documented, what wasn’t, and whether escalation should have occurred.


