Many Nashua patients move through the health system quickly—sometimes the same day. A common pattern we see is:
- A prescription is started after an urgent care visit or a hospital stay
- A pharmacy fills the order while the patient is still adjusting to new symptoms
- Follow-up instructions are provided verbally and then “summarized” in the chart
- A second provider later discovers the mismatch (or the reaction becomes hard to explain)
When care is fragmented across providers and locations, medication error evidence can get scattered. A lawyer’s job is to reconstruct what happened—order entry, dispensing, labeling, and administration—so the claim is tied to the harm instead of getting lost in disagreements about who should have noticed the problem.


