Hospital negligence isn’t always a dramatic “wrong move.” More often, families notice a pattern: symptoms that should have triggered escalation, discharge instructions that don’t match the patient’s condition, or gaps in monitoring during high-acuity periods.
In the Manassas Park area, common scenarios we see families question include:
- Medication and monitoring issues after transfer between departments (ED → inpatient, inpatient → observation)
- Delayed recognition of deterioration—for example, when vital signs change but next steps aren’t documented clearly
- Discharge planning problems that lead to setbacks soon after leaving the facility
- Infection control concerns or failures to follow isolation/precaution protocols
- Post-procedure complications where follow-up documentation doesn’t show appropriate reassessment
Sometimes the chart reads like a timeline of “what happened,” but it doesn’t answer the legal question: whether the care met professional standards and whether any breach meaningfully contributed to the harm.


