Many medication-related incidents don’t look like a “clear error” on day one. In real Parkland households and clinics, the mistake may be noticed only after symptoms change, follow-up care is delayed, or a second provider reviews the medication list.
Common situations we see include:
- Wrong instructions after a refill (e.g., directions that don’t match the prescription label or discharge paperwork)
- Strength or formulation mix-ups (especially when a patient has similar medication names)
- Interaction problems overlooked during busy appointment schedules
- Chart and medication-list mismatches when patients transition between providers
- Facility-to-pharmacy handoffs where the “current” medication list differs from what was actually dispensed
In Florida, health care records and pharmacy documentation matter because they’re often the best way to prove what was ordered, what was provided, and what should have been verified before the medication was used.


