Every case is different, but Crown Point families often come to us after events that share a theme: something critical wasn’t noticed, communicated, or acted on quickly enough.
1) Delayed escalation after symptoms worsen
In busy hospital settings, early warning signs can be documented but not escalated with enough urgency. For residents who travel to care facilities or rely on rapid follow-up after admission, a delay can mean the difference between a manageable complication and a permanent injury.
2) Medication administration issues
Medication errors can involve the wrong dose, timing problems, missed allergy checks, or failure to account for interactions. These problems are especially serious when a patient’s condition changes between nursing checks or shift handoffs.
3) Discharge too soon—or with instructions that don’t fit
Some injuries don’t show up until after discharge: a return to the ER, worsening symptoms at home, or missed follow-up. If the discharge plan didn’t match the patient’s real condition, Indiana law may allow a claim based on negligent care.
4) Infections tied to process failures
Not every infection is malpractice. But when a family later learns something about hygiene practices, isolation precautions, or monitoring that appears inconsistent, it can become central to a negligence theory.
5) Procedure-related safety breakdowns
Surgical and procedural harms can stem from documentation gaps, incorrect site verification, or failure to follow required safety protocols.


