In smaller communities across Colorado, people often cycle through multiple touchpoints in a short period: a primary care visit, a specialty referral, a pharmacy refill, and then a return visit when symptoms don’t improve. When a medication error is involved, that “rapid back-and-forth” can make it harder to reconstruct events later—because the records get updated, clinicians document based on partial information, and the original packaging or labels may be lost.
A lawyer’s job is to slow the story down—by pulling the right records and building a clear sequence of what was prescribed, what was dispensed, and what was actually taken.


