In smaller communities and suburban settings, people commonly use a mix of providers—urgent care visits, primary care, specialists, and local pharmacies. That “patchwork” can create gaps where:
- A medication change from one visit doesn’t fully transfer to the next.
- A pharmacy label doesn’t match what the prescriber intended.
- Instructions get misunderstood when a patient is juggling work, childcare, or transportation.
- Follow-up happens later than it should, so symptoms are treated as “new” conditions.
When the error isn’t obvious immediately, the timeline matters. In Alabama, records and documentation are usually where the case is won or lost—because liability depends on what was ordered, what was dispensed, and what was actually administered or taken.


