In Florence, people commonly receive care in more than one setting—an urgent care visit, a primary care follow-up, a specialist appointment, and then pharmacy dispensing. When something goes wrong, the error may not be obvious in the moment.
Instead, the critical question becomes: when did the medication plan change, and what did each provider know at the time?
Common Florence-area scenarios include:
- A prescription is changed after an office visit, but the updated instructions don’t clearly match what the pharmacy labels.
- A patient reports prior medications, yet the chart med list used by a provider doesn’t reflect the same information.
- A hospital or urgent care discharge summary lists one dosing schedule, while the pharmacy’s directions reflect another.
In these situations, the “story” is usually split across documents. A lawyer’s job is to reconstruct that sequence so the evidence supports causation—not just suspicion.


