Medication mistakes don’t usually start as “big” errors—they start as small breakdowns in a chain of care. Residents in the Carencro area often see patterns like:
- Discharge-day prescription mix-ups: Hospital discharge instructions and outpatient prescriptions don’t match, or a new medication is listed incorrectly.
- Pharmacy refill errors: A refill is filled with the wrong strength, an outdated medication is dispensed, or labeling doesn’t reflect the most recent instructions.
- Multiple providers, one patient: A primary care doctor changes a medication while another provider prescribes something overlapping, and the reconciliation step fails.
- Wrong instructions, same bottle: The medication is correct, but dosing directions are confusing—leading to missed doses or double-dosing.
- After-hours access and urgent care: People seeking quick help may receive medication changes without the same level of medication-history review.
These situations can be especially frustrating because the paperwork may look “close enough” at first. But in a claim, “close enough” isn’t the standard—what matters is what was ordered, what was dispensed, what was administered, and what harm followed.


