Georgetown families often notice medication issues in the same “pattern” ways:
- A change right after a dose adjustment: staff may say a resident is “sleepier today” or “more lethargic,” then the symptoms continue or worsen.
- New confusion or falls during peak activity periods: shifts can be busier around meal times, therapies, and transportation schedules, increasing the risk of missed checks or delayed responses.
- A resident’s baseline behavior doesn’t match the documentation: nursing notes may not reflect what family members observed during visits.
- Discharge or transfer medication reconciliation problems: when someone moves between facilities or levels of care, the medication list can become outdated or incomplete.
Medication harm isn’t always a dramatic overdose. It can be gradual—sedation building over days, breathing suppression after certain drug combinations, or instability that leads to falls.


