Medication mistakes are often discovered after the fact—when symptoms worsen, follow-up care is delayed, or a second provider reviews the chart and realizes the plan doesn’t add up.
In Georgia, deadlines and procedural steps matter. Evidence also has a short shelf life: pharmacy systems overwrite logs, hospital discharge summaries get updated, and staff recollections fade. Acting early can make the difference between a claim built on documents versus one that relies on incomplete memory.
A lawyer can start by turning your experience into a timeline, then request the specific pharmacy and medical records that typically control outcomes.


