Medication error cases often turn on sequence: what was prescribed, what was dispensed, what instructions were provided, and when symptoms began.
In real Union-area situations, the “timeline gap” is common:
- A prescription change is made during a short visit, then confirmed later by pharmacy records.
- A follow-up appointment is delayed due to work or transportation.
- A patient tries to “push through” side effects until a second provider reviews records.
The result is that the most important documents can get lost or become incomplete. A lawyer’s first job is usually to build a defensible timeline using the records that still exist—before they’re overwritten, archived, or contradicted.


