Medication harm doesn’t always look like a dramatic “wrong drug” moment. Sometimes it starts as a confusing change—new symptoms after starting a medicine, a sudden decline after discharge, or side effects that don’t match what clinicians expected.
In Savannah, these issues often show up after:
- Discharge from hospitals and inpatient units, where medication lists are updated quickly
- Pharmacy handoffs (especially when prescriptions are transferred or refilled across providers)
- Seasonal volume at pharmacies and clinics during peak tourism months
- Care coordination between multiple prescribers (primary care, specialists, and urgent visits)
A lawyer’s job is to translate what happened into a legal story supported by records: what was ordered, what was dispensed, what was supposed to be administered, and what harm followed.


