Many medication errors are discovered only after the patient starts taking the medicine—sometimes hours later, sometimes after follow-up at a different clinic or pharmacy.
In real Corona-life scenarios, these delays matter:
- A prescription is filled quickly at a nearby pharmacy and the patient relies on printed label directions.
- A dosage adjustment is made during a rushed visit, but the discharge instructions don’t match what’s on the bottle.
- A patient switches providers (for example, after an urgent care visit) and medication lists don’t carry over accurately.
- A family member administers medication based on what was written in a discharge summary, only to realize the timing or strength doesn’t match.
When the timeline is messy, the evidence becomes crucial. Courts and insurers typically want a clear chain showing what was ordered, what was dispensed, what was administered, and how the injury evolved.


