In a community like Plymouth, it’s common for patients to:
- get prescriptions from one clinic,
- fill them at a nearby pharmacy,
- then follow up with a different provider or urgent care when symptoms worsen.
That handoff pattern matters legally. Many medication errors don’t become obvious until you’re back in the system—when a new clinician reviews records, changes the plan, or orders labs to address unexpected side effects.
A strong case often depends on reconstructing that timeline: what was ordered, what was dispensed, what instructions were given, and what changed in your health after the medication was taken.


