A dangerous drug claim generally centers on the idea that a medication was not reasonably safe when used as intended, and that the safety failure contributed to your injury. In practice, this can involve allegations that the drug had design or manufacturing problems, that important risks were not properly communicated through labeling and warnings, or that additional safety information should have been provided once risks became known.
For Georgia residents, these cases often show up after a patient begins a prescription and experiences severe side effects, a worsened underlying condition, or a delayed reaction that becomes impossible to ignore. Sometimes the injury is temporary and life-disrupting. Other times it is permanent, requiring ongoing care, therapy, or assistance with daily activities.
It’s also common for people to feel frustrated because the medication was prescribed for a legitimate reason. You trusted a healthcare provider and followed instructions. That’s why the legal focus is not on blame in the emotional sense; it’s on whether the drug’s safety and warning systems were legally adequate and whether the medication likely caused or significantly contributed to your harm.


