Overmedication claims often begin with patterns that look like “the facility is doing fine” until suddenly it isn’t. In the Rochester Hills area, families frequently describe situations like:
- After hospital discharge or ER visits: A resident comes back with new diagnoses or changed kidney/liver function, but medication lists aren’t promptly reconciled.
- Increased fall risk and heavy sedation: Confusion, unsteady gait, or frequent falls that appear soon after medication administration—especially when staff can’t explain the timing.
- Behavior changes that don’t match the resident’s baseline: Agitation or withdrawal that escalates after dose frequency changes, without clear clinical justification.
- “Routine” schedule changes that aren’t really routine: A medication is adjusted or administered on a schedule that doesn’t reflect the prescribing provider’s instructions.
These aren’t just “bad luck.” When medication-related harm occurs, Michigan families deserve records that show what was ordered, what was given, and what monitoring and escalation happened afterward.


