Before you worry about claims, prioritize documentation and medical direction. In medication-injury cases, the strongest evidence is usually built early.
Do this right away:
- Call your prescribing provider or seek urgent medical advice if symptoms are severe. Don’t stop a medication abruptly without guidance.
- Collect your medication proof: pharmacy receipt, prescription label, pill bottle details, and any patient insert you received.
- Write down a timeline while it’s fresh—start date, dose changes, when symptoms began, and what you told your clinicians.
- Request medical records tied to the injury (office notes, hospital/urgent care visits, labs, imaging, discharge summaries).
Avoid:
- Waiting months to gather records (it’s harder to connect symptoms to the prescription later).
- Making definitive statements to insurers or online “bots” that can become inconsistent with medical documentation.
If you’re wondering whether an AI tool can “handle it for you,” the helpful answer is: AI can organize information, but it can’t verify medical causation, evaluate Washington legal standards, or respond to defense arguments.


