Many Fitchburg patients receive prescriptions after appointments at nearby medical facilities or following a stay that involved multiple caregivers. When someone is discharged, the medication plan often changes—sometimes with new instructions delivered verbally, in writing, or through a patient portal.
That’s where medication error problems can multiply:
- A prescription is written correctly, but the label or instructions don’t match what the doctor intended.
- A dose is changed, but the wrong strength is dispensed.
- Follow-up directions are hard to follow, and the patient ends up taking medication inconsistently.
- There’s a delay in recognizing that symptoms are linked to a medication issue.
In Wisconsin, the practical challenge is often aligning the timeline: what was ordered, what was dispensed, what was taken, and what clinicians documented afterward.


