Many medication error cases in our area begin like this: a prescription is provided after a visit, an update occurs later (sometimes days later), and then symptoms appear—or a new instruction is given that doesn’t match what the patient received.
In a place like Statesboro, where patients often rely on a mix of urgent care visits, primary care follow-ups, and pharmacy fills, medication records can easily become fragmented. That makes it harder to prove what happened, when it happened, and whether the “fix” came too late.
If your condition worsened after a medication was started, changed, or dispensed, don’t assume it was just the illness. The legal question is whether medication was prescribed/dispensed/administered below a reasonable safety standard—and whether that failure caused or worsened harm.


