Medication errors don’t always occur in dramatic ways. In Snellville, we frequently see issues tied to the way care is managed across multiple steps:
- Refills and dose changes during routine follow-ups: A prescriber updates a dose, but the pharmacy dispenses the prior strength or the instructions don’t match.
- Transfers between providers: Patients may see a specialist, then return to a primary care clinic—records can lag, and medication histories can be incomplete.
- Wrong medication at pickup: Similar drug names, packaging confusion, or a mix-up between strengths can lead to the wrong pill being taken.
- Confusing “as needed” instructions: When instructions aren’t clear, patients may take more (or less) than intended.
- After-hours or urgent care timing: Bottled-up symptoms and fast discharge instructions can increase the chance that the next day’s medication plan is misunderstood.
No matter how the error happened, the important question is the same: what was supposed to happen, what actually happened, and how the mistake contributed to injuries or worsening health.


