A common pattern we see in small-city Texas communities is that people recognize a medication issue after symptoms worsen—sometimes weeks into treatment, sometimes right after a dosage change. By the time they call an attorney, the details that make or break causation can be scattered across:
- pharmacy pickup records and refill dates
- doctor visits in different facilities (including urgent care)
- lab results and imaging reports
- notes about symptom progression
Because Texas courts and insurers expect a coherent medical narrative, we focus early on building a defensible timeline: when you started the drug, when symptoms began, how they changed, and what clinicians documented.
In other words, the case is rarely “just the drug name.” It’s the documented connection between the medication and the harm.


