Northampton patients commonly face situations that make causation harder to prove unless the records are organized early. For example:
- Busy schedules around commuting and appointments can lead to medication changes, missed follow-ups, or delayed symptom reporting.
- Seasonal shifts (winter weather, spring allergies, summer travel) can complicate whether symptoms were attributed to the environment or to a medication.
- Multiple prescribers—primary care, specialists, urgent care, and pharmacy substitutions—may create gaps in how side effects were documented.
Those details matter legally. Massachusetts cases typically turn on how well the medical record supports the connection between the drug and the injury—especially when the defense argues an alternative cause.


