Sherman patients often juggle quick appointments, winter flu surges, seasonal allergies, and work schedules that don’t allow long delays. That means medication changes may occur in compressed time windows—such as:
- Discharge from an ER or hospital with new meds and tight follow-up timelines
- Urgent care prescriptions written during busy shifts
- Pharmacy refills processed while patients are managing other obligations
- Medication list updates that don’t match what was actually dispensed or administered
In Texas, the practical reality is that evidence tends to “move on” quickly: orders get archived, staff recollection fades, and electronic medication logs may be stored under different systems. The sooner you start organizing documentation, the better your ability to prove what happened.


