Many Michigan patients don’t connect the dots until symptoms surface after a prescription begins—or until the complications persist long after the medication is stopped. In Troy, that timing can be especially stressful because many people rely on predictable health to maintain demanding schedules and physically active lifestyles.
Typical patterns we see in medication injury matters include:
- A medication triggers severe reactions after a dose change or short-term use
- Side effects worsen over weeks, leading to missed work and follow-up care
- A warning in the labeling doesn’t match what your doctor advised, or what your medical team reasonably relied on
- New safety communications come out after you were already using the drug
If your injury has disrupted your life, the legal question becomes: What evidence can support a medical link—and who is legally responsible?


