In Soledad, patients often receive medication through a chain of touchpoints—urgent care or a clinic visit, pharmacy pickup, then follow-ups when symptoms don’t improve as expected. That sequence is where medication errors can get obscured.
Common “hidden” problems residents report include:
- A medication list that doesn’t match what was actually dispensed
- Confusing dose directions that weren’t clarified before the first dose
- A pharmacy label that doesn’t reflect the prescriber’s intent
- A chart entry that contradicts later notes
- Delayed recognition of an interaction or dosing mismatch
A lawyer’s job is to turn that confusion into a clean timeline and a defensible theory of what duty was breached and how it caused harm.


