While every case is different, Thibodaux residents often contact us after similar categories of problems:
1) Delayed escalation when symptoms worsened
Patients don’t always deteriorate in a straight line. If a patient’s condition changed—pain level, breathing, bleeding, confusion, fever—then the question is whether staff recognized it early enough and escalated appropriately.
2) Medication and dosing problems
Hospital medication errors can involve wrong dosing, missed doses, incorrect timing, or failure to account for allergies and interactions. In real-world cases, these issues often surface when symptoms change shortly after an administration event.
3) Discharge instructions that don’t match the risk
Some injuries occur right after leaving the hospital: instructions that are too vague, follow-up that never happened, or discharge decisions made before the patient was truly stable.
4) Infections and infection-control failures
Not every infection is negligence—but when infections appear tied to sterilization practices, isolation protocols, or delayed antibiotic decisions, the record review becomes critical.
5) Procedure-related safety breakdowns
When an outcome is linked to a procedure, claims may focus on consent accuracy, safety checks, operative documentation, and whether standard safety steps were followed.