After surgery, many patients expect at least some alignment between their symptoms, follow-up notes, imaging timelines, and explanations from the care team. In real life, especially in smaller communities across Wyoming, patients often coordinate appointments with multiple providers and may rely on documents from different systems.
Problems can become clearer when you notice things like:
- Your symptoms or exam findings appear later than what the chart suggests.
- Imaging or pathology results described in documentation don’t match what you were told.
- Notes read like they were generated or summarized rather than reflecting real-time clinical decision-making.
- A report references an automated system, AI tool, or decision-support output—yet the next step taken by the team isn’t explained.
These aren’t proof by themselves. But they are strong reasons to request the complete record and have it reviewed by a lawyer familiar with medical negligence investigations.


