Overmedication cases in West Park commonly follow patterns families recognize from day-to-day communication with staff:
- Rapid changes after hospital discharge: A resident leaves a hospital or ER, returns with new prescriptions, and within days develops excessive sleepiness, agitation, breathing issues, or fall risk.
- Dose timing problems: Instead of administering at the correct intervals, medication may be given too close together, missed, or repeated—sometimes during shift changes when workflows are busiest.
- “Same medication, no adjustment”: Facilities may continue a regimen even after the resident’s condition changes (kidney/liver impairment, dehydration, infection, cognitive decline), when safer monitoring and dose reviews are expected.
- Inadequate response to side effects: Even when a dose is technically “on paper,” failure to recognize symptoms and promptly escalate concerns can turn a manageable reaction into serious injury.
These situations can look like natural decline at first. But a key difference is whether the timeline of symptoms aligns with medication administration and whether the facility followed reasonable care steps afterward.


