In Newark, many people receive treatment across multiple settings—urgent care visits, hospital care, outpatient follow-ups, and community pharmacy fills. Errors frequently emerge at these handoff points:
- After discharge: new instructions may conflict with what you were taking in the hospital.
- When refilling prescriptions: automated systems can pull forward the wrong strength or directions.
- During busy pharmacy hours: high-volume workflows can increase the chance of labeling or verification issues.
- When multiple providers are involved: different clinicians may enter orders that don’t fully reflect recent labs or medication changes.
If the harm appeared after a medication change or a refill, that timing matters. Delaware cases often turn on proving what was ordered, what was dispensed, what was administered (if applicable), and how the error connects to the injury.


