Many medication errors don’t look dramatic at first. They show up as “small” inconsistencies—an instruction that doesn’t match what you were told, a dose that seems different than expected, or a refill that arrives while you’re already dealing with side effects.
In real life around Tracy, these errors often occur when:
- A patient switches between urgent care, a specialist, and a primary care provider without a fully updated medication history.
- A pharmacy change happens mid-treatment (for example, due to stock issues, insurance coverage, or convenience during a commute).
- Discharge instructions are given quickly after an ER or hospital visit, and the medication list is later clarified by a different clinician.
- Overlapping medications increase the chance of an interaction being overlooked.
The key point: even if the error seems “obvious,” liability still depends on what was ordered, what was dispensed, what was administered, and how the harm unfolded afterward.


