Many hospital negligence cases don’t start with a dramatic headline. They start with a pattern:
- A symptom that worsens after discharge
- A test result that appears not to have triggered escalation
- A medication change that doesn’t match what the patient was told
- Confusion about who communicated what—and when
In Brunswick, residents may be seen by different departments, facilities, or specialists during a single illness. That can create real-world documentation problems—missing pages, delayed lab reporting, or handoff notes that don’t clearly explain clinical decisions.
A lawyer’s job is to translate those gaps into a clear theory of negligence supported by the chart, not just assumptions.


