In a coastal, suburban area like Lighthouse Point, many medication errors surface around moments when people are transitioning—leaving a hospital, starting a new prescription after a doctor visit, or resuming meds after changes to kidney function, blood pressure, or diabetes management.
Common local scenarios include:
- New prescriptions added at discharge while the patient is still dealing with pain, fatigue, or follow-up instructions.
- Pharmacy handoffs where the label instructions don’t match what the prescriber intended.
- Refills that don’t reflect the updated plan, leading to duplicate therapy or a dosing schedule that’s off by a critical step.
- Multiple caregivers or family members picking up medications—helpful for recovery, but it can also make documentation errors harder to spot.
When that’s your situation, what matters is reconstructing what was intended, what was dispensed, and what was actually taken.


