In and around Amesbury—where people may switch between urgent care, primary care, local pharmacies, and nearby hospitals—errors often show up during transitions. Common scenarios include:
- Wrong dose after a discharge: a hospital changes a prescription, but the outpatient instructions don’t match the medication list.
- Dispensing problems at the pharmacy: incorrect strength, confusing labels, or a substitution that wasn’t supposed to occur.
- Interaction or allergy checks missed: especially when a new medication is added quickly.
- “Similar name” confusion: medications with close-sounding names or abbreviations.
- Timing mistakes: instructions like “morning” vs. “evening” or “once daily” vs. “twice daily” get misunderstood.
Even if the error seems obvious, the legal question usually becomes: what was ordered, what was actually dispensed/used, and how that error contributed to the harm.


