If the situation is still ongoing, prioritize safety and medical care. Once you can, collect information that will matter later—especially because medication claims often turn on timing.
- Medication change details: What was started, increased, decreased, or discontinued—and when.
- Observed symptoms: Sedation, confusion, sudden falls, trouble breathing, unusual agitation, unresponsiveness, dizziness, or new incontinence.
- Care response: Did staff contact a nurse/doctor promptly? Were vital signs and mental status checked after the change?
- Communication trail: Who told you what, and when (call logs, texts, discharge papers, after-visit summaries).
In Georgia, the practical challenge for families is that records may be slow to arrive, and small gaps can be used to argue the timing didn’t match. Acting early gives your attorney the best chance to build a defensible timeline.


