While every case is different, we often see negligence theories that connect to how families experience care after urgent events—whether the initial visit was due to an accident, sudden illness, or complications that developed during treatment.
1) Missed escalation during monitoring
When vital signs or test results suggest deterioration, hospitals rely on protocols for notifying the right clinician and escalating care. In these cases, the fight is usually over what was documented, what was communicated, and when.
2) Medication and dosing problems
Medication errors are not limited to “wrong drug” mistakes. They can involve dosing, timing, dosage adjustments, contraindications, or failure to account for allergies and interactions. The chart typically shows whether safeguards were followed.
3) Discharge issues that lead to a rapid return
Robstown residents sometimes experience a harmful cycle: discharge instructions don’t match the patient’s needs, follow-up is delayed, or warning signs weren’t clearly communicated. If the patient worsens soon after leaving, those discharge documents—plus follow-up records—often become central evidence.
4) Procedure-related safety failures
From pre-procedure checks to documentation of what occurred, these cases hinge on operative notes, nursing records, consent forms, and imaging/lab results.