Lancaster patients commonly interact with multiple parts of the healthcare system in a short window—primary care appointments, urgent care visits, follow-ups, pharmacy fills, and sometimes transfers between facilities. When medication changes happen across those steps, the timeline becomes the key.
A lawyer will typically focus on questions like:
- When the prescription was written and when it was actually filled
- Whether the label matched the order exactly
- When symptoms started and what clinicians believed was causing them at the time
- How quickly the error was recognized (and whether it should have been)
In New York, insurers and defense teams will look closely at whether the event was promptly addressed and how the medical record reflects that response. If the timeline is unclear, it can be harder to connect the medication error to the injury.


