In many Athens cases, the “what happened” is hard to reconstruct because care moves quickly between settings—an urgent care visit, a follow-up appointment, a pharmacy pickup, and then a change in symptoms. The key is establishing a clear sequence:
- when the prescription was written
- when it was filled (and what label instructions said)
- when the medication was started
- when symptoms began
- what clinicians documented afterward
That timeline matters because defendants often argue that symptoms were caused by the underlying condition, a progression of illness, or another medication. A strong claim requires evidence that the error contributed to the harm—not just that something went wrong somewhere in the chain.


