Many Sandy residents manage care through a mix of family medicine visits, urgent care, pharmacy refills, and follow-ups. When an error occurs—like a wrong strength, an incorrect instruction, or an interaction that wasn’t caught—the “incident” can show up days later when symptoms worsen or a new provider reviews the chart.
In practice, the hardest part is often reconstructing the timeline:
- What was prescribed?
- What did the pharmacy dispense?
- What instructions were actually on the label?
- When did symptoms begin?
- Who was told what, and when?
Oregon cases depend heavily on documented causation, so the sequence matters. A lawyer can help you build a clean, evidence-based timeline from the documents that exist (and request the ones that don’t).


