A college student walks into a community emergency department after a reported fall. The CT shows bilateral frontal hemorrhages. A neurosurgeon directs her care by phone from home — orders are placed, but no narrative note explains the reasoning. Over the next thirty hours, the patient deteriorates through documented changes that no single provider connects. By the time decompressive surgery begins, it is near midnight on hospital day two. A diagnosis that was visible on imaging at 12:31 PM was not reported. A risk factor that fit the picture was not on the chart. Seven defendants are dismissed on summary judgment. One is left to settle. The seven-figure resolution of a case that turned, more than anything else, on what was — and was not — written down.
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The Charted Defense
Every hospital in America has a system for reporting critical lab results. Rory Staunton's death proved that having a system and having one that works are two very different things.
Every hospital in America has a system for reporting critical lab results. Rory Staunton's death proved that having a system and having one that works are two very different things.Listen on
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