A lot of medication error cases aren’t discovered at the moment the pill is taken. Instead, they surface after a transition—like when someone leaves a clinic, gets discharged from a hospital, or refills a prescription at a pharmacy that’s handling many customers in a short window.
Common University City–style patterns we see include:
- Discharge paperwork that doesn’t match the actual prescription sent to the pharmacy
- Confusing “take as directed” instructions that are interpreted differently by a patient or caregiver
- Wrong strength or substitution during refills when a medication is temporarily unavailable
- Chart medication lists that don’t update after a provider changes a therapy
In Missouri, records and timelines matter because they help show what was ordered, what was dispensed, what was labeled, and what was actually taken. When the story is scattered across visits, it’s easy for key details to get lost—unless you act quickly.


