Miramar patients often receive care through a mix of primary doctors, urgent care visits, pharmacy pick-ups, and follow-up appointments. That “handoff” rhythm can make medication mistakes harder to catch—especially when:
- A prescription is changed at an urgent care visit, but the updated directions don’t fully carry over.
- Multiple medications are managed at once (common with chronic conditions), increasing the chance of confusion.
- A pharmacy fills quickly during a high-volume period, and labeling or instructions are not verified closely.
- A patient is traveling between facilities and timelines don’t match perfectly across records.
In legal terms, many cases are not about a single bad act—they’re about where the process broke down and whether that breakdown caused harm.


