In and around Buffalo, many people manage care alongside work, school, and commuting. That means medication changes often happen quickly—new prescriptions after appointments, refills that get handled by someone other than the patient, and discharge instructions delivered while you’re still processing a lot.
That’s exactly why medication errors can be missed at first.
Common “Buffalo-area real life” scenarios include:
- Refill timing confusion: A new prescription overlaps with an older one, and the instructions don’t match what’s in the medication bottle.
- Pharmacy label problems: Directions printed on the label conflict with what the prescriber said during a visit.
- After-hospital medication transitions: Med changes happen at discharge, but the follow-up instructions aren’t clearly reflected in the take-home list.
- Family-assisted medication use: When someone else helps administer medication, small labeling or dosing mistakes can have outsized consequences.
If your symptoms worsened soon after a prescription change, or if the medication you received didn’t match the plan you were told, don’t assume it was harmless or “just an accident.” The legal question is whether the error was preventable and whether it caused harm.


