Every case is different, but Central Point families often come to us after events like these:
- Worsening symptoms after discharge or transfer: a patient leaves with instructions that don’t match their risk level, or follow-up doesn’t happen quickly enough.
- Missed escalation in busy units: staffing and workflow pressures can affect monitoring—especially when a patient’s condition changes subtly at first.
- Medication and allergy issues: dosing/timing problems, incorrect medication administration, or failure to account for allergies and interactions.
- Surgical/procedure complications tied to safety checks: problems related to pre-op planning, intra-procedure documentation, or post-procedure monitoring.
- Communication gaps between teams: test results not relayed to the right clinician, incomplete handoffs, or unclear responsibility for next steps.
In Oregon, proving negligence requires more than showing something went wrong. You generally need to show that care fell below the reasonable standard for that setting and that the breach caused or substantially contributed to the injury.


