Most medication-error cases are won or lost based on what’s preserved early. If the incident just happened, focus on health first, then evidence.
Do this right away:
- Get medical attention for symptoms or adverse reactions—don’t “wait it out.”
- Ask for a medication reconciliation (what you should be taking vs. what you were actually given).
- Save packaging and labels (bottles, blister packs, pharmacy printouts, and discharge medication lists).
- Write down the timeline while it’s fresh: when you filled the prescription, when you started taking it, when symptoms began, and what follow-up care you received.
In practice, Suffern area families often see the same pattern: a prescription is filled quickly, a change happens after a visit, then the mismatch only becomes obvious after a second appointment or a specialist reviews records. The sooner you document your version of events, the easier it is for counsel to compare it to what was actually ordered and dispensed.


