Independence patients often receive care through a mix of settings—primary care visits, urgent care, hospital discharge follow-ups, and pharmacy fills. That’s where medication errors commonly slip in:
- Discharge instructions that don’t match the pharmacy label (dose, timing, or medication name)
- Medication lists that weren’t updated after a change in care
- Confusion during repeat fills—especially when a prior prescription differs from the new order
- Missed interaction warnings when a system flags something but it isn’t resolved before dispensing
- “Quick fix” changes after a phone call or message that never fully updates the chart
In practice, the timeline matters. If the error happened around a discharge, a weekend urgent care visit, or a change made mid-appointment, the records may show competing versions of “what was intended.” Your claim needs a lawyer who can reconcile those documents into a clear story.


