Medication errors aren’t always obvious in the moment. In Oswego—where many people coordinate care across primary doctors, specialists, and pharmacies—errors often surface during routine transitions.
You may have a medication error claim if you’re seeing patterns like:
- Wrong strength or wrong formulation after a prescription is filled—especially when refills look similar.
- Confusing dosing instructions after a hospital stay or urgent care visit, leading to missed doses or double-dosing.
- Discharge med lists that don’t match what you actually received, including missing medications or incorrect schedules.
- Interaction or allergy oversights when a new prescription is added to an existing regimen.
- Delayed recognition of an adverse reaction, where symptoms are treated as unrelated before the timeline is reviewed.
If you’re thinking, “I know something was off, but I can’t prove it yet,” you’re not alone. The evidence is often there—it just needs to be organized and connected.


