Your first priority is safety. But once you’ve gotten medical attention, the next moves can determine how strong your claim is.
Right away, do these things:
- Ask for confirmation of the correct medication plan (name, strength, dosage schedule, and duration).
- Save the evidence you can physically keep: medication packaging, labels, discharge paperwork, and any “medication list” your provider gave you.
- Write down a timeline while it’s fresh: when the prescription was filled, when it was taken/used, when symptoms began, and what follow-up care occurred.
- Request copies of records from the prescriber and the pharmacy involved.
In Ohio, it’s common for patients to hit obstacles like incomplete med lists at transitions of care—especially when someone sees a specialist, then follows up with a primary care doctor or visits an urgent care clinic. That’s why documenting the medication chain (who ordered it, who dispensed it, who reviewed it) is so important.


