Durham patients often juggle:
- commuting and shift work (including early mornings and late evenings)
- changing specialists (primary care to neurology, psychiatry, pain management, etc.)
- follow-up care across local systems
- family responsibilities while recovering
Those normal demands can delay documentation. But with prescription injuries, the timeline is frequently the difference between a claim that moves forward smoothly and one that stalls.
Common Durham scenarios include:
- Symptoms begin after a medication change—dose increases, switching brands/generics, or adding a second drug that interacts.
- Side effects appear during travel or busy weeks—people postpone reporting symptoms until they can “catch up,” which can complicate causation.
- Ongoing harm continues after stopping the drug—patients may assume the medication “can’t be the cause,” even when doctors believe otherwise.
- Warnings seem incomplete—after the fact, patients discover the risk they experienced was minimized, missing, or not presented clearly enough.
A lawyer’s job is to translate your timeline into legal proof that addresses how the injury is connected to the medication.


