Hospital negligence claims in the Rio Grande Valley often begin with a pattern: initial symptoms worsen, communication breaks down, or follow-up doesn’t match what a patient needed.
Common “early warning” situations we see from families include:
- ER-to-inpatient handoff problems: a patient is admitted, but the care plan doesn’t reflect new test results or changing symptoms.
- Medication and monitoring gaps: delays in verifying orders, missed checks, or insufficient reassessment when a condition deteriorates.
- Discharge that feels rushed: instructions that don’t align with the patient’s risk level, follow-up that’s hard to obtain, or warning signs that aren’t emphasized.
- Procedure-related complications: families notice issues after surgery—pain, infection concerns, or abnormal symptoms—that don’t appear to have been addressed promptly.
If you’re thinking, “We asked questions and still ended up here,” you’re not alone. The goal is to evaluate whether the care met Texas standards and whether the harm was connected to a breach—not just an unfortunate outcome.


