In suburban communities like Dunwoody, care frequently involves multiple handoffs: primary care to specialists, specialists to pharmacies, and pharmacy refills back to follow-up visits. When you’re managing work, school schedules, and commuting, it’s easy for records to get out of sync.
That’s why many medication error cases locally revolve around sequence—what was ordered, what was dispensed, what was administered (or taken), and when symptoms escalated.
Common Dunwoody-area scenarios we see include:
- A medication change made during an appointment, but the pharmacy fills an older strength.
- Conflicting instructions across discharge papers, after-visit summaries, and the pharmacy label.
- Symptoms that start after a refill, but the patient is told to “wait and see” before anyone reviews the medication history.
- Documentation gaps when a patient uses more than one pharmacy or provider network.
A lawyer’s role is to reconstruct that timeline and identify where the safety breakdown occurred.


