In our area, it’s common for people to:
- Use multiple pharmacies (workday convenience, refills, or switching providers)
- Coordinate care between primary doctors, specialists, and urgent care
- Manage medications for kids, seniors, and seasonal schedule changes
- Rely on quick discharge instructions after ER or hospital visits
When medication changes happen across different locations and times, documentation gaps are more likely—like missing allergy notes, outdated medication lists, or unclear dosing instructions. If the medication error occurs during one handoff (prescribing, dispensing, or administration), the rest of the care chain can be impacted.
That’s why an attorney’s job isn’t just to confirm “something went wrong,” but to reconstruct the timeline and identify where the system failed—so you can pursue accountability for the harm caused.


