Medication mistakes don’t always look dramatic at first. Sometimes the error shows up only after you’ve been home, when you realize the label instructions don’t line up with what your provider told you, or when symptoms worsen because the medication plan wasn’t what it should have been.
In real Woodstock-life, common “confusing” scenarios include:
- Pharmacy changes during a busy schedule: You switch locations or fill prescriptions across pharmacies, and records don’t transfer cleanly.
- Follow-up care across multiple providers: A specialist updates orders, but the medication list in another record is outdated.
- Paperwork gaps after urgent visits: After an ER or urgent care visit, discharge instructions may be incomplete or hard to interpret.
- Children and older adults: Dosing errors can be especially harmful when dosing depends on weight, age, or kidney function.
If you’re thinking, “How could this happen?”—that’s a normal question. The legal issue is whether the error was preventable and whether it caused harm that should have been anticipated.


