In the Richmond area, it’s common for patients to see multiple providers—urgent care, hospital emergency departments, specialists, and then a pharmacy that may be different from the hospital that prescribed the medication. When a medication error occurs, the “timeline” can become fragmented:
- A prescription may be changed after discharge, but the updated instructions don’t fully match what the pharmacy dispensed.
- Symptoms may begin while you’re at work or commuting, and the next available appointment is days later.
- Medication lists in different systems may contradict each other (especially when you’ve been treated in more than one facility).
A lawyer’s job is to reconstruct what happened across the handoffs—so your claim isn’t dismissed as vague or “unrelated” to the medication.


