Lewisville residents often describe similar patterns when they reach out—especially when a patient’s condition changed rapidly, records are hard to understand, or there’s confusion about what was communicated.
Common situations include:
- Delayed diagnosis after ER triage: symptoms present, but testing/escalation happened later than it should have.
- Medication or order errors during busy shifts: wrong dose, wrong timing, missed allergy considerations, or orders not carried out.
- Inadequate monitoring after admission: worsening vital signs, pain escalation, or lab changes that weren’t acted on promptly.
- Discharge planning that doesn’t match the patient’s needs: instructions that don’t align with the documented risk level, follow-up that’s not arranged, or conditions that require closer observation.
These issues aren’t just “bad outcomes.” In a negligence claim, the question becomes whether the care fell below the standard expected in similar circumstances—and whether that breach contributed to the harm.


