Spring Lake residents often experience care through a mix of settings—urgent care visits, hospital treatment, outpatient follow-ups, and pharmacy fills that may involve multiple systems or providers. That matters because medication errors commonly occur during handoffs.
Common local scenarios we see include:
- Discharge-day confusion: new prescriptions added while previous meds aren’t clearly discontinued.
- “Looks right” prescriptions with later consequences: the bottle label seems correct at first, but the instructions or refill changes don’t align with the discharge plan.
- Pharmacy workflow breakdowns: wrong strength, wrong quantity, or incomplete counseling—especially when patients are managing multiple prescriptions.
- Care transitions after appointments: symptoms appear after a dose change, but the timeline in the chart doesn’t clearly explain why the change happened.
North Carolina law requires proof of negligence and causation. The stronger your timeline and documentation, the easier it is to show that the error wasn’t just unfortunate—it was preventable and harmful.


