In a suburban community like Westmont, medication injuries often surface during ordinary routines:
- Starting a prescription after a primary care visit and then developing worsening symptoms shortly after.
- Taking a medication while balancing a commute and realizing fatigue, dizziness, or cognitive changes are more than “normal adjustment.”
- Relying on updated instructions from a pharmacy refill—then learning later that the warnings or safety information you were given didn’t reflect the risks at the time.
- Needing continued treatment after stopping the drug, because the complication didn’t resolve as expected.
These cases can be emotionally difficult because they feel personal: you trusted a healthcare plan, and now you’re trying to make sense of what went wrong.


