In our experience with Clinton County families, hospital negligence concerns often surface after events like these:
- Delayed escalation during worsening symptoms: A patient’s condition changes after rounds or overnight, but the chart doesn’t clearly show timely reassessment.
- Medication and monitoring issues: Errors can involve dosing, timing, missed checks, or failure to respond to lab/vital sign trends.
- Discharge planning problems: Patients sent home (or transferred) without the right follow-up, instructions, or safety monitoring—especially when symptoms require close observation.
- Infection control concerns: While not every infection is negligence, families often notice patterns tied to hygiene practices, isolation steps, or antibiotic decisions.
These scenarios are frustrating because they don’t always look like “one big mistake.” Often, the case turns on how decisions were documented, when questions should have been escalated, and whether the hospital’s care met the standard expected in the same circumstances.


