In many Crestwood cases, the problem isn’t obvious at the pharmacy counter or hospital discharge. It may surface after:
- A symptom flare after starting a new prescription
- Confusing label directions that don’t match what the prescriber discussed
- A follow-up visit where another clinician notices an inconsistency in the medication list
- A delayed recognition of the correct dosage (especially when multiple meds are involved)
Because Missouri medical providers rely heavily on written orders, medication lists, and pharmacy dispensing documentation, the timeline matters. Records can also be updated after the fact—so acting early to preserve the original documentation can be critical.


