In communities like Columbia, medication mistakes often surface in patterns:
- A discharge instruction from a hospital or clinic doesn’t match what you picked up at the pharmacy.
- A new prescription starts after a follow-up visit, then symptoms worsen days later.
- A dose gets adjusted over the phone or through a portal message, but the updated instructions don’t reach the pharmacy or the next provider.
When that happens, the key question becomes what changed, when, and who had the responsibility at each step. Tennessee claims often turn on whether the records can show a clear chain—order → dispensing → labeling → administration/usage → resulting injury.


