While negligence can happen in many ways, Portsmouth-area hospital injury cases often involve these real-world patterns:
1) Missed or delayed escalation in ED-style visits
Short-staffed moments, high patient flow, and back-and-forth communication can contribute to delays—such as waiting too long to re-evaluate worsening symptoms or failing to respond to abnormal test trends.
2) Medication and allergy-related errors
Errors can include wrong dosing, timing problems, or not accounting for allergies/interactions. These issues matter because the “why” behind a deterioration is rarely obvious without a careful record review.
3) Infection control and post-procedure complications
Not every infection is negligence, but when complications occur, hospitals must still follow appropriate protocols. Records related to isolation precautions, antibiotic use, wound care, and monitoring can be central.
4) Discharge and follow-up failures
In a coastal community where people travel, work irregular schedules, or rely on family for transport and support, discharge problems can be especially damaging—such as instructions that weren’t realistic for the patient’s condition or follow-up that didn’t happen when it should have.
5) Communication breakdowns across shifts and providers
A handoff problem—between clinicians, between units, or between inpatient and outpatient teams—can create gaps in what was known, what was acted on, and what was documented.