Many Clayton patients are dealing with injuries that don’t behave like a typical “short-term reaction.” Common local scenarios we see include:
- Side effects that show up during normal commuting and daily activities, then escalate—leading to missed work, reduced driving ability, and ongoing treatment.
- Medication changes after an urgent care or ER visit, where symptoms continue even after the prescription is stopped.
- Confusion about timing, especially when patients take multiple medications while dealing with chronic conditions—making it harder to connect symptoms to one drug without careful review.
- Safety updates and label changes that arrive after the injury, prompting the question: “Should we have been warned more clearly before this happened?”
The goal is not just to identify the medication. It’s to document what happened, when it happened, and why the drug—based on the evidence—may be legally responsible.


