Most people don’t begin with legal theory. They begin with a pattern—symptoms that show up after a prescription, worsen after a refill, or continue after stopping.
Common local catalysts we see include:
- Work and commute disruption: side effects that make it hard to drive, focus, or maintain job duties after starting a medication.
- Follow-up delays: when appointments are scheduled weeks out, injuries can progress before a doctor documents causation.
- Multiple providers, scattered records: specialists, urgent care, and primary care may all treat parts of the problem, but the legal case needs a single, coherent timeline.
When you contact a lawyer, the goal is to turn what feels confusing into a clear record: what you took, when symptoms began, what doctors observed, and what the evidence suggests about the drug’s role.


