In and around Red Bank, medication problems commonly arise when care moves quickly—between primary care visits, urgent care, specialty appointments, and pharmacy refills. That movement can create gaps where errors slip through, such as:
- A new prescription issued after a visit isn’t matched to the medication list the patient already has.
- A refill is processed differently than the original order (wrong strength, substitution, or incomplete instructions).
- A discharge plan from a facility doesn’t clearly sync with what the patient is told to take at home.
- A clinic or pharmacy relies on information that’s out of date—especially when the patient uses multiple providers.
These scenarios matter legally because liability often turns on whether reasonable safety checks were followed during the handoff—whether that handoff happened in a Tennessean clinic workflow, a pharmacy counter process, or a system used for ordering and refilling.


