
Types of Cases We Handle
Mis-management of Medically Assisted Treatment (MAT)
Stopping or changing MAT without medical oversight can trigger severe withdrawal, relapse, or worse. When a facility mismanages your medication, the consequences are not just uncomfortable, they can be life-threatening.
Serving all of Florida | Offices in West Palm Beach and Jupiter
When the Treatment Meant to Save You Becomes the Danger
For many people in recovery, MAT is the bridge between crisis and stability. It requires careful clinical oversight, consistent monitoring, and a team that understands how deeply disruption can affect a person who is already fighting for their life. When a facility treats MAT as a checkbox rather than a clinical responsibility, patients suffer consequences that can last far longer than their time in treatment.
How negligence happens:
MAT abruptly stopped without medical planning
Withdrawal symptoms ignored or untreated
Incorrect dosing that destabilizes recovery
Relapse triggered by unsafe medication changes
Families who have watched a loved one spiral after an abrupt medication change know exactly what that failure looks like — and they are often told it was expected, or that recovery is just difficult. It is not always true. In many cases, the harm was caused by a specific decision the facility made, and it was preventable.

We Know What Proper MAT Management Requires — and When It Was Ignored
Ryan P. Ingraham spent years on the defense side of rehab litigation, learning exactly what MAT protocols facilities are required to follow and where they quietly cut corners. Susan Ramsey's ICU nursing background means she can read a medication chart and identify clinical failures long before an expert witness takes the stand. Together, they build cases that hold facilities responsible for what their records actually show.
We do not pursue quiet settlements that let facilities continue doing the same thing to the next patient. We investigate, document, and fight for full accountability — and we do it because every person harmed by MAT mismanagement deserved the safe, supervised care they were promised.
