In Connecticut, medication errors often surface through patterns that look ordinary at first—until they don’t.
For example, a common Naugatuck scenario involves:
- A new prescription started after a quick visit (including urgent care or follow-up with a different provider)
- Pharmacy fill timing that changes how quickly you realize something is off
- Multiple medications on the same day (including refills that are similar in name or strength)
- Changes to instructions that weren’t clearly communicated
Sometimes the harm is immediate—an allergic reaction, worsening symptoms, or an unexpected adverse effect. Other times it’s delayed, showing up after you’ve taken several doses. Either way, the key question becomes the same: did a responsible party fail to follow safe medication practices, and did that failure cause the injury?


