Roseville patients often receive care across multiple settings—primary care clinics, urgent care, hospital systems, and community pharmacies. That “handoff” reality matters legally because medication errors frequently occur during transitions:
- A prescription changes after a visit, but the updated instructions don’t match what the pharmacy dispenses.
- A pharmacy fills a medication correctly, but labeling or directions differ from what the clinician intended.
- A systems or workflow issue causes a mix-up when the patient is managing refills across providers.
When you’re dealing with the aftermath, it’s not enough to know that something went wrong. The key question becomes: where in the medication chain did the failure occur, and how did it lead to harm?


