In a tight-knit health-care environment, the “story” of what went wrong can become harder to reconstruct—especially when records arrive in fragments. A prescription change might be documented in one system, but the pharmacy receipt, the label, and the discharge instructions may reflect different versions of the plan.
Common Madison-area scenarios include:
- A discharge order doesn’t match what the pharmacy label shows
- An outpatient follow-up adjusts dosing, but the new instructions never fully sync
- A short-staffed transition of care (after a procedure or ER visit) leads to incomplete verification
- More than one prescriber contributes to duplicative or conflicting medication directions
Early legal help matters because evidence can be harder to obtain later—particularly pharmacy logs, verification records, and the clinical notes that explain why certain decisions were made.


