In many Glassboro cases, the challenge isn’t that an error happened—it’s that the paper trail is fragmented:
- A prescription may be updated in one system, but the label or instructions reflect an older plan.
- A discharge summary may not fully match what was sent to the pharmacy.
- A follow-up visit may document symptoms, but not clearly connect them to the specific medication timeline.
- Multiple clinicians may treat the effects of the error without documenting what was actually supposed to occur.
When care crosses settings—community health visits, outpatient procedures, and pharmacy dispensing—New Jersey plaintiffs often need help reconstructing the sequence so liability and causation don’t get dismissed as “unclear.”


