Before you contact anyone else, prioritize safety. Then act quickly to preserve evidence.
1) Get medical attention and ask for a medication reconciliation. If you were given the wrong medication, strength, or instructions—or if symptoms suddenly changed after starting a drug—tell the treating provider exactly what you were taking and when. Ask them to confirm what you should have been receiving.
2) Document your “timeline,” not just your symptoms. Write down:
- the date/time you filled the prescription
- the date/time you started taking it
- when symptoms began
- what follow-up you received (urgent care, ER, primary care)
In Humble, many people rely on urgent care and same-day visits during workweeks. Those records often become the backbone of later causation arguments—so the timeline matters.
3) Preserve packaging and labels. Keep:
- pharmacy bottle labels (and any tear-off instructions)
- medication guides
- discharge paperwork
- any “changed dose” notes you received
4) Don’t wait on “it’ll pass.” Adverse reactions and dosing mistakes can worsen quickly, especially for medications that affect blood pressure, blood sugar, blood clotting, infection control, or seizure control.


