Every case is different, but certain types of medical failures show up repeatedly in injury claims. If your situation resembles any of the following, it’s especially important to review the timeline and documentation:
1) Missed or delayed escalation in the ER
Patients often arrive with symptoms that require monitoring, repeat vitals, or escalation when results change. A claim may turn on whether staff responded appropriately as conditions evolved—particularly when waiting times and crowded conditions are involved.
2) Medication errors during transitions of care
This can include wrong dosing, timing issues, incomplete allergy checks, or failure to account for medication interactions—especially when care teams change shifts, consult different specialties, or update treatment plans.
3) Infection prevention failures
Infections can occur even with good care, but some injuries raise questions about sterilization, isolation practices, wound care, or post-procedure protocols.
4) Discharge planning that doesn’t match reality
A discharge decision may be questioned when follow-up instructions were inadequate, warning signs weren’t communicated, or the patient wasn’t safe to leave based on their condition and risk factors.
5) Procedure-related documentation gaps
Sometimes the issue isn’t only what was done—it’s what wasn’t documented. Operative notes, nursing records, and consent forms can matter when the chart doesn’t reflect what the patient needed.