In our experience with New Mexico medical negligence matters, people often first notice a problem because the story doesn’t add up—especially when discharge happens quickly or follow-up is complicated.
Some of the most common red flags we see include:
- Changes after medication starts or changes (timing confusion, missed doses, or reactions that weren’t properly addressed)
- Delayed escalation in urgent deterioration (symptoms worsening while clinicians monitor instead of re-evaluating)
- Preventable hospital-acquired infections (questions about sterilization practices, isolation procedures, or antibiotic decisions)
- Discharge instructions that don’t match the condition (especially when a patient needs close monitoring or specialty follow-up)
- Documentation gaps (missing vitals, incomplete notes, or inconsistent timelines across nursing and provider records)
If any of these sound familiar, the next move is not to “wait and see.” Evidence and witness memory matter.


