In and around West Mifflin, families often face a familiar pattern: symptoms start, you get transported, and decisions happen in quick succession—ER triage, lab draws, imaging, consultations, medication administration, and discharge planning.
In negligence cases, those minutes and hours matter because Pennsylvania courts look at reasonable care under the circumstances and whether a lapse substantially contributed to the harm. If the record doesn’t show timely assessment, escalation, or communication, it becomes a key issue.
That’s why we start with timeline clarity:
- when symptoms were first documented
- when tests were ordered vs. performed
- when results were reviewed and acted on
- when monitoring changed (or didn’t)
- what discharge instructions did—or didn’t—address


