In Johnstown, many people receive care across multiple settings—primary care visits, urgent care, hospital discharge instructions, and follow-ups with different clinics. When the medication plan changes between those steps, it’s easier for an error to slip through and harder for patients to explain what happened.
A strong medication error case usually turns on:
- What was ordered (the original prescription or medication order)
- What was dispensed (pharmacy records, label details, and lot/strength information when available)
- What was administered (hospital/clinic medication administration records, if applicable)
- What symptoms followed and when (medical notes, ER visits, lab results, and follow-up documentation)
If your records show inconsistent medication lists, “held” orders, or different instructions across visits, that’s not just paperwork—it can be central evidence.


