While every case is different, Monroeville families often come to us after a few familiar types of breakdowns:
1) Delayed escalation in the ER or inpatient unit
Symptoms don’t always start as a clear emergency. Sometimes they worsen while waiting on tests, consults, or reassessment. The question becomes whether the team responded within accepted medical standards for that situation.
2) Medication and dosing issues
These can involve timing, dosage, reconciliation after transfer, allergy or interaction problems, or administration errors. Even when staff acted with good intentions, the legal focus is whether the care met the applicable standard and whether the error contributed to harm.
3) Missed monitoring or documentation gaps
A patient can deteriorate quickly, and negligence allegations often hinge on whether vital signs, test results, or symptom changes were recognized and acted on promptly.
4) Procedure-related safety failures
When injuries occur around surgery or invasive procedures, evidence typically includes operative reports, nursing notes, consent forms, and post-procedure documentation.
5) Discharge problems that trigger a rapid decline
Discharge is a high-risk moment. If instructions were unclear, follow-up was inadequate, or a patient left before stability was appropriate, injuries may surface quickly—sometimes after a long drive or return home.