Medication mistakes can occur anywhere, but Farmington’s day-to-day realities can make errors harder to catch early. Many people receive care across multiple settings—urgent care visits, follow-ups, and pharmacy fills—often with changes to meds happening quickly.
Common local scenarios we see include:
- Hospital discharge or urgent care changes made late in the day, followed by a pharmacy fill with instructions that are difficult to interpret.
- New prescriptions layered on top of existing meds, especially when patients manage chronic conditions and rely on family members to confirm dosing.
- Medication instructions that conflict between a discharge summary and what the pharmacy label says.
- Delayed recognition of side effects when the patient is told to “monitor” rather than return promptly.
The result is that the “first sign” of an error may look like a routine adverse reaction—until the records are compared closely.


