In a community like Cleburne—where emergency care can be busy and patients may move between ER, imaging, observation, and discharge—small breakdowns can create big downstream harm.
Common Cleburne-area scenarios we see in negligence investigations include:
- ER-to-admission handoffs where symptoms worsen before the next level of evaluation
- Discharge decisions made during short-staffed or high-volume shifts
- Medication changes after transfers between units or care settings
- Follow-up instructions that don’t match what the record shows was medically necessary
A key point: hospitals often argue that outcomes were inevitable due to underlying conditions. The case turns on whether care met the Texas standard of reasonable medical judgment at the time—and whether the harm is credibly connected to what was (or wasn’t) done.


