Many of the most common allegations we see in North Carolina hospitals involve failures that can be difficult to spot during a crisis—especially when families are dealing with sudden deterioration, long waits, or multiple handoffs.
In Salisbury, families frequently report concerns like:
- Medication and timing problems during inpatient stays (including missed doses, incorrect administration, or incomplete allergy/drug-interaction checks)
- Delayed escalation when symptoms worsen—tests ordered but not followed through, or monitoring that didn’t trigger a higher level of care
- Discharge and follow-up gaps—instructions that don’t match the patient’s condition, or discharge decisions made too quickly
- Surgical/procedure safety failures—where documentation or protocol compliance may be inconsistent
- Infection control issues—not every infection is preventable, but a pattern of lapses can be relevant
What matters is not whether something “went wrong,” but whether the care deviated from accepted standards and whether that deviation likely contributed to the injury.


