Medication errors don’t always look dramatic at first. Many Bridgewater families discover the problem only after symptoms worsen or after they try to follow instructions that don’t match what they received.
Some of the most common situations we see in Massachusetts include:
- Pharmacy fill mix-ups: the correct prescription exists, but the wrong strength, formulation, or medication is dispensed—sometimes caught only after a reaction.
- “Hospital-to-home” transitions: after an ER or inpatient stay, discharge instructions conflict with what a patient picks up from a pharmacy.
- Multiple prescribers, one medication list: primary care, specialists, and urgent care may each update medication instructions, increasing the risk of inconsistent directions.
- Timing and dosage confusion: instructions like “twice daily” or taper schedules get misunderstood when they’re documented differently across records.
Because Bridgewater residents often manage healthcare schedules around work, school, and commuting, delays in addressing the issue can happen. The sooner you document what occurred and what symptoms followed, the stronger your case tends to be.


