A common Brookfield scenario involves a “handoff” between settings—urgent care to home, hospital to rehab, or a change in primary care that doesn’t fully update the medication list. Illinois patients frequently rely on medication reconciliation to prevent duplicate therapy or incorrect dosing, but when the chain breaks, the results can be serious.
You may notice a medication error through:
- Discharge instructions that don’t match what you received at the pharmacy
- Refill changes that weren’t clearly communicated to you or your caregiver
- Dosage schedule confusion (e.g., “twice daily” vs. “once daily”) after a new prescription
- Medication list mismatches in follow-up visits
- Symptom escalation that begins soon after a change in medication
If you’re facing this kind of situation, the most important legal step is not debating what “seems likely.” It’s preserving the proof that shows what was ordered, what was dispensed, and what was actually taken.


