Many medication errors don’t happen in isolation. They appear after a chain of events—an appointment, a pharmacy run, a refill, then a change in symptoms that doesn’t match what was expected.
For example, Alabaster patients frequently describe timelines like:
- A new prescription was filled and started right away, but symptoms worsened within days.
- Instructions on a label didn’t match what the patient was told verbally.
- A follow-up visit had incomplete medication lists, making it harder to spot the mismatch.
- A hospital discharge included medication changes that didn’t reconcile with earlier orders.
These scenarios matter legally because medication error claims often hinge on sequencing—what was ordered, what was dispensed, what was administered, and when the harm became clinically apparent.


