In suburban communities around Worth, many claims begin the same way: a patient or family member notices a pattern after discharge or during follow-up—symptoms that worsen, new complications, or delays in getting answers.
Common scenarios we see include:
- Delayed escalation of symptoms during long shifts, when monitoring should have triggered additional testing or consultation.
- Medication mistakes—wrong dose, missed doses, or failure to account for documented allergies or interactions.
- Discharge and follow-up breakdowns, where instructions don’t match the patient’s condition or warning signs aren’t clearly communicated.
- Preventable infections or hygiene lapses, especially where isolation precautions or sterilization procedures appear inconsistent.
- Missed or incomplete diagnostic workups, including failure to order appropriate tests when red-flag symptoms were present.
- Procedure-related errors, where operative steps, counts, documentation, or safety checks were not handled properly.
These issues are not “what if” problems. They matter because negligence claims require showing that the care decision at the hospital level contributed to the injury, not just that something went wrong.


