Yorkville is growing, and with that comes more patients moving between providers—urgent care, primary care, specialty clinics, and pharmacies. In real life, medication errors frequently surface when schedules are tight and handoffs are rushed, such as:
- A new prescription is started after a visit, but the medication list in the chart wasn’t updated correctly
- A refill is handled quickly while a patient is traveling to work or school schedules
- A dosage change is communicated verbally, but the written order doesn’t match what was discussed
- A pharmacy fills a prescription while the patient’s medication history is incomplete
When the error happens in a system that relies on fast transitions, the most important evidence is often the timeline—what was ordered, what was dispensed, what instructions were given, and when symptoms began.


