In a suburban community like Oldsmar, medication problems frequently surface during routine transitions:
- A hospital discharge followed by filling prescriptions at a nearby pharmacy
- A primary care follow-up where a new order conflicts with an older regimen
- Medication changes after urgent care or a same-day visit
When these handoffs happen quickly, the timeline becomes critical. The question isn’t only whether something was wrong—it’s whether the wrong medication (or dose, or instructions) was carried through the next step of care.
A lawyer’s early focus is reconstructing that chain: what was ordered, what was dispensed, what was administered (or taken), and when clinicians recognized—or should have recognized—the problem.


