In communities like Richmond, many people first notice something is wrong after they’ve been taking a medication while continuing daily routines—working at local employers, driving through peak traffic, or staying on a demanding schedule.
That day-to-day life can make it harder to remember precise details later. It’s common for people to say:
- “I started the medicine around the same time my symptoms began.”
- “I told my doctor, but I’m not sure what was documented.”
- “I stopped the medication, but the effects didn’t go away.”
When injuries linger, the legal question becomes: what evidence shows the medication is the likely cause (or a substantial contributor)? Attorney review matters because your medical records need to be organized in a way that supports causation—not just a belief that the drug was involved.


