East Lansing patients often notice injuries during routine schedules—starting a new prescription before an exam period, during a busy work stretch, or after a change in healthcare providers. Dangerous medication claims frequently start with one of these patterns:
- Side effects that disrupt daily functioning: severe adverse reactions that make it hard to work, drive safely, attend classes, or manage basic responsibilities.
- Symptoms that worsen after dose changes: new or intensified effects after increasing dosage or switching to a related medication.
- Hospital/ER visits that don’t feel “explained”: emergency care where clinicians document complications but you later realize the drug’s risk information may not have been clear.
- Long-tail injuries: problems that persist after stopping the medication—sometimes requiring ongoing treatment or specialist care.
Even when you used the medication exactly as prescribed, Michigan law still may allow a claim if the drug was unreasonably dangerous due to warnings, defects, or other product-related failures.


