Pittsburg families often tell us the same story: things seemed stable until a medication schedule shifted—sometimes after a physician visit, a hospital discharge, or a staffing/shift change.
While every case is different, common medication-error patterns include:
- Sedation or pain-med dosing that increases fall risk: residents become unusually sleepy or slow to respond, then experience falls or injuries.
- Missed monitoring after dosage changes: staff notes may show “routine” checks, but not the specific observations that would typically be expected after a medication adjustment.
- Medication reconciliation failures after transitions: when a resident returns from the hospital or rehab, the “new list” may not match what was actually administered.
- Unaddressed side effects: symptoms like breathing changes, severe constipation, delirium, or sudden confusion are sometimes treated as unrelated rather than medication-related.
If you’re noticing a decline that tracks with medication timing, that timing can become crucial evidence.


