Is 'recovery' a physical place, as Lynne suggests, or a description of the patient's condition? If the former, then whilst grammatically correct in its rawest, it's not common English since we would generally arrive *at* places rather than *to* places.
sqad!! I am doing a case study on a patient who was hypothermic upon arrival in recovery. I then have to use the nursing process ( assess, plan, implement and evaluate) the patients care (only for the hypothermia and only in recovery) NICE guideline recommends using a bair hugger. I also must state the impact that this body temp has on a human body :-)
Strictly speaking probably not, but it's a kind of shorthand note taking form of grammar isn't it? The kind of thing that's perfectly acceptable on a medical report that is intended to convey key facts quickly and isn't going up for the Booker prize or something.
The only thing I'd query is the use of 'to' before recovery. I assume recovery is a place in hospital, so 'in' or 'at' would be better.