Not every adverse reaction is a legal case, but certain patterns are red flags—particularly when they show up after a medication change.
Common Wellington-area scenarios include:
- Wrong strength or wrong formulation after a refill (e.g., extended-release vs. immediate-release)
- Instructions that don’t line up with what the bottle label says after a discharge or follow-up
- Medication list mix-ups when a patient is seen at an urgent care and later returns to a primary doctor
- Missed interaction risks when a new prescription is added without a complete medication history
- Timing problems—such as dosing schedules that were entered incorrectly during a refill or care transition
If you’re thinking, “Something doesn’t add up,” that instinct matters. The key is documenting what you were prescribed, what was dispensed, and what happened afterward.


