In real life, a Wellington patient may receive a medication plan from one provider, have it filled at a pharmacy, and then be seen again shortly after for side effects. By the time you’re trying to explain what happened, your care team may have different versions of the medication history, especially if:
- the first prescription was updated or discontinued but the pharmacy record still reflects the older instructions,
- a discharge summary lists one dosing schedule while your bottle label shows another,
- a follow-up clinician notes symptoms that don’t line up with the original prescription intent,
- records were entered late—after the error should have been caught.
When this happens, a claim becomes less about “someone made a mistake” and more about what the responsible parties did (or didn’t do) and how the error affected your care.


