In Littleton, many people receive care through a mix of primary care visits, urgent care, pharmacy fills, and follow-up appointments spread across different providers. That “chain of handoffs” can make medication errors harder to spot early—especially when:
- A prescription is changed after a visit, but the pharmacy label doesn’t match the updated instructions.
- A patient’s medication list in the chart doesn’t include what was actually being taken.
- A follow-up appointment happens days later, and the error only becomes obvious after symptoms worsen.
First priority: get medical attention and ask the treating team to confirm what medication you should be taking now. Then, start documenting the details while they’re still fresh.
Quick local action checklist:
- Save the pharmacy bottle(s), blister packs, and any printed medication labels.
- Write down the dates/times of the prescription, fill, and first symptoms.
- Request copies of the medication administration record (if you were in a facility) and the pharmacy dispensing record.
- Keep discharge papers, after-visit summaries, and lab results.


