Many medication errors are discovered right after a transition in care—when someone leaves a facility and starts managing medications at home. In Elgin, that can happen after:
- ER and urgent care visits
- hospital discharge for chronic conditions
- follow-ups with specialists
- medication renewals tied to busy primary care schedules
A common pattern is that the “right” medication appears in one document, but the instructions or the dose in another record doesn’t match what the patient actually received. Those mismatches matter legally because they can show how the error entered the medication process and whether it was preventable.
If you’re trying to understand whether the problem occurred at the prescriber step, the pharmacy step, or during administration/discharge instructions, the timeline is often the most important evidence.


