- Get medical safety first. If you’re having symptoms you believe are medication-related, seek care immediately.
- Ask for a medication reconciliation. Request that the treating team confirm the exact drug, dose, schedule, and intended duration—especially if there was a recent change.
- Preserve proof while it’s easy to access. Keep:
- prescription labels and medication bottles (do not discard them)
- discharge paperwork and after-visit summaries
- pharmacy receipts and any written instructions
- photos of labels, if you can do so safely
- Write a quick timeline for your attorney. Include dates/times of when you were prescribed, filled, and first noticed symptoms.
Texas medication-error disputes often turn on documentation and sequencing—what was ordered, what was dispensed, what was administered, and when the harm started.


