Medication problems often surface during real-life transitions, such as:
- After hospital discharge: A change in meds is made quickly, and the instructions on the discharge paperwork don’t match what a pharmacy prepared.
- During urgent or same-day care: Providers may update prescriptions without a complete medication history, increasing the risk of duplication or incorrect dosing.
- Pharmacy handoffs and refills: A refill may be processed under a different instruction set, a label can omit critical directions, or the strength can be entered incorrectly.
- Care gaps for seniors and caregivers: Family members or home caregivers may rely on medication lists that were created in a hurry and later prove inaccurate.
If you were injured after a prescription was filled, labeled, or administered incorrectly, you shouldn’t have to guess who dropped the ball. The evidence usually shows where the process failed.


