Herriman’s suburban layout means many families commute for work and manage care from a distance. In practice, that can make it harder to notice medication red flags early—especially when staff changes, daytime routines, or shift handoffs affect what gets documented.
Common patterns we see in the Salt Lake Valley include:
- Medication changes during transitions (for example, after a hospitalization or a discharge back to skilled nursing)
- After-hours or weekend dosing adjustments where monitoring notes are thinner
- Inconsistent updates to the care plan when a resident’s condition shifts
- Family-observed symptoms (falls, agitation, heavy sedation) that don’t match the story in the chart
These are exactly the types of inconsistencies that a medication injury case depends on—because negligence is often about process, not just a single mistake.


