Before you think about legal options, make sure you’re safe.
- Get medical clarification immediately. If symptoms worsen or you suspect you received the wrong medication/strength, contact your prescribing clinician or seek urgent care.
- Ask for a medication reconciliation. In Michigan, patients often transition between providers (primary care, specialists, urgent care, hospitals). A reconciliation helps confirm what you were supposed to be taking versus what you actually received.
- Preserve the proof while it’s still available. Keep the bottle(s), blister packs, labels, and any discharge paperwork or after-visit summaries.
- Write down the timeline while you remember it. Note the date/time you filled the prescription, when you started taking it, when symptoms began, and what clinicians told you.
If you’re trying to decide whether a mistake is “serious enough” to pursue, that’s a common question. In Farmington, people often downplay issues at first—especially when the prescription looks correct. But legally, the key is not just whether an error occurred; it’s whether it caused harm.


