Many medication errors in the Ashland area don’t become obvious until a patient is home and following a new routine—especially after:
- hospital or rehabilitation discharge
- ER visits that result in new prescriptions
- changes to chronic medications (blood pressure, diabetes, anticoagulants)
- short-term “bridge” prescriptions
When a patient leaves care, the medication list, dosing schedule, and instructions should line up across documents. If they don’t, you may see delays in recognition, confusion about what to take, or repeat visits before anyone connects the dots.
A lawyer’s job is to reconstruct the handoff: what was intended, what was dispensed, what was written on the label, and what instructions were actually given.


