Medication mistakes often occur when people are balancing appointments, work, and family responsibilities—then symptoms appear later, or follow-up instructions don’t match what was dispensed. Some patterns we see in the Dyer area include:
- Post-visit prescription confusion: A provider visit results in a new medication, but the instructions you receive don’t align with the bottle label or the pharmacy receipt.
- Wrong-strength dispensing: The medication looks familiar, but the dosage strength is different—leading to side effects, inadequate control, or worsening conditions.
- Labeling and administration mix-ups: In outpatient settings and long-term care environments, a medication can be administered incorrectly due to documentation errors or unclear labeling.
- Interacting prescriptions across providers: Patients often see more than one clinician. If the medication list isn’t updated promptly, an interaction may not be addressed in time.
- Weekend/after-hours fill issues: When pharmacies are busy or staffing shifts, verification steps can be rushed—creating opportunities for avoidable mistakes.
If any of these sound like your situation, don’t assume it was “just an accident.” Indiana law focuses on whether the responsible party failed to meet the required standard of care and whether that failure caused harm.


