Many cases in the Ossining area start with a pattern that doesn’t feel “medical,” even if it’s happening inside a hospital:
- A diagnosis seemed delayed or unclear after symptoms worsened.
- A medication change didn’t match what the patient had been told.
- A test result wasn’t acted on quickly enough.
- Discharge instructions didn’t align with the patient’s condition.
- Complications developed after transfer between units or facilities.
Because Ossining residents often coordinate care across multiple appointments and systems, hand-offs and communication breaks become a central issue. The question isn’t only what went wrong—it’s whether the hospital’s actions (or omissions) were inconsistent with what a reasonable care team would do in the same circumstances.


