In Marshall, many people receive care across multiple settings—urgent care visits, primary care follow-ups, hospital discharge instructions, and pharmacy pickups—sometimes while commuting, working shifts, or managing family responsibilities. Those “handoffs” are where medication problems can slip through.
For example:
- A discharge paper lists one medication or dose, but the pharmacy label shows something different.
- A follow-up visit changes instructions, yet the updated plan doesn’t reach the pharmacy quickly.
- A resident in a long-term care or assisted living setting receives an order that doesn’t match the most recent chart.
When the timeline is messy, the legal work becomes evidence-heavy. The sooner you preserve documentation, the better your chances of building a clear narrative of causation.


