In a smaller community, it’s common for patients to see multiple providers quickly—primary care, urgent care, specialists, and then a pharmacy visit. The handoffs can create gaps, especially when:
- Medication lists aren’t updated the same way across visits
- Discharge instructions arrive with different wording than what the pharmacy label says
- A newer prescription is started while older meds were still active
- Patients or caregivers are trying to manage complex schedules at home
When an error isn’t recognized until symptoms worsen, the timeline matters. Missouri cases often turn on medical records showing what was ordered, what was dispensed, and what clinicians believed was happening afterward.


