While medication errors can happen anywhere, residents often report patterns tied to how care is scheduled and coordinated—particularly when someone is seen at multiple locations or has a time-sensitive transition.
**You may have a medication error claim if the problem started during a: **
- Hospital discharge or same-day release: Wrong instructions on a discharge sheet, missing med reconciliation, or confusion about “stop” vs. “start.”
- Pharmacy filling delays or urgent refills: A substitution made without clear confirmation, labeling that doesn’t match the order, or a strength error.
- Care handoffs across providers: Primary care, urgent care, specialists, and pharmacy staff may each have partial information.
- Frequent medication changes for chronic conditions: Dose adjustments that weren’t clearly communicated (or were entered inconsistently).
- Automated refill systems and pharmacy workflow: Tech-driven ordering can reduce errors, but it can also repeat outdated instructions if the system isn’t updated.
In Vandalia, many people rely on quick turnaround care—so when a medication error occurs, the “timeline” becomes a central issue. The sooner you document what you were told to take, when you took it, and what happened next, the easier it is to assess what went wrong.


