In a smaller community, it’s common for patients to receive care from more than one clinic or to switch pharmacies for convenience. When a medication error happens, the facts can become harder to pin down quickly:
- Multiple providers update your chart, but the medication list doesn’t match.
- A pharmacy refill history doesn’t reflect what you were actually told at a visit.
- After-hours care or urgent treatment adds new instructions that conflict with the original plan.
- Transportation and work constraints delay follow-up, which can blur symptom onset.
A lawyer’s job is to reconstruct the timeline: what was ordered, what was dispensed, when it was administered, and how symptoms changed afterward. In Massachusetts, that evidence-building matters because disputes often turn on whether the harm was caused by the medication error—not just that an error occurred.


