After a medication error, the first priority is medical safety. But the second priority—often overlooked—is preserving proof while it’s still easy to obtain.
Consider doing the following right away:
- Ask the treating provider to document the suspected error and the clinical reason for the change in treatment.
- Save the medication packaging (bottles, labels, paperwork) and take photos of the label details.
- Write down a timeline while it’s fresh: who prescribed it, when you filled it, when you started taking it, when symptoms began, and when you contacted care.
- Request copies of relevant records (prescription history, pharmacy dispensing records, and visit notes).
In Texas, evidence tends to make or break these cases. The sooner you organize what you can, the easier it is for an attorney to evaluate causation and identify which part of the medication process failed.


