When you entrust your health to a pharmacy, you expect prescriptions to be filled accurately and safely. However, pharmacy errors occur more often than most people realize, and the consequences can be devastating. A single dispensing mistake can lead to catastrophic brain injury, leaving victims with permanent cognitive impairment, physical disabilities, and dramatically altered lives.
In New York, approximately 1.5% of hospital prescriptions involve dispensing errors, and medication mistakes harm an estimated 1.5 million Americans annually. When these errors involve critical medications or dosing miscalculations, the result can be anoxic brain injury from oxygen deprivation, toxic encephalopathy from neurotoxic substances, or metabolic catastrophes that permanently damage neurological function.
If you or a loved one suffered brain injury due to a pharmacy error in New York, understanding your legal rights is essential. This page explains how pharmacy malpractice causes brain damage, who can be held liable, and how to pursue compensation for your injuries.
Key Takeaways
- Pharmacy errors cause serious harm: Wrong medications, incorrect dosages, and dispensing failures harm 1.5 million Americans yearly, with medication errors costing $38-$50 billion in additional healthcare expenses.
- Brain injury can happen quickly: Medication errors causing respiratory depression, cardiac arrest, or severe reactions can trigger brain damage within 4-6 minutes of oxygen deprivation.
- New York has strict deadlines: You have 2.5 years to file a lawsuit for private pharmacy errors, but only 90 days to file a Notice of Claim if the error occurred at a public hospital pharmacy.
- Settlements can be substantial: Pharmacy error brain injury cases have resulted in settlements ranging from $1.2 million to $15 million, depending on the severity and permanence of injuries.
- Multiple parties may be liable: Both pharmacists and prescribing physicians can share responsibility when medication errors cause brain injury.
How Pharmacy Errors Cause Brain Injury
Brain injuries from pharmacy errors typically occur through three primary mechanisms: oxygen deprivation (anoxic injury), direct neurotoxic effects, or metabolic disturbances. Understanding these pathways helps explain why seemingly minor dispensing mistakes can have catastrophic consequences.
Anoxic and Hypoxic Brain Injury
The most common mechanism of pharmacy-related brain injury involves oxygen deprivation. According to research on anoxic encephalopathy, when medication errors cause respiratory depression, cardiac arrest, or severe hypotension, brain cells begin dying within minutes of inadequate oxygen delivery.
When blood supply to the brain decreases, a cascade of cellular damage begins. The brain switches to anaerobic respiration, reducing ATP production and causing the sodium-potassium pump to malfunction. Sodium influxes into cells, triggering depolarization and calcium accumulation. Within 4-6 minutes, this process causes irreversible neurological damage through mitochondrial injury, activation of destructive enzymes, and disrupted protein synthesis.
Common medication errors triggering anoxic brain injury include opioid overdoses causing respiratory failure, incorrect cardiac medications causing severe arrhythmias and reduced blood flow, and sedative errors leading to prolonged unconsciousness and aspiration.
Toxic Encephalopathy
Some pharmacy errors result in direct neurotoxic effects when patients receive medications that poison brain tissue. This occurs when the wrong drug is dispensed and has harmful neurological effects, when dosing errors create toxic blood levels of otherwise therapeutic medications, or when dangerous drug interactions are missed during the dispensing process.
For example, one documented case involved a patient receiving Nortriptyline instead of the correct medication, worsening an irregular heartbeat condition and causing permanent heart and brain damage. The patient received a $1.2 million settlement.
Metabolic Encephalopathy
Brain injury can also result from metabolic disturbances caused by pharmacy errors. These include hepatic encephalopathy from liver-damaging medications, severe hypoglycemia from incorrect diabetes medications, and electrolyte catastrophes from compounding errors.
A particularly serious case involved an 18-year-old prescribed Depakote without proper liver function monitoring. The medication caused complete liver failure requiring a transplant, and the resulting hepatic encephalopathy led to permanent brain damage. That case settled for $8 million.
Common Types of Pharmacy Errors That Cause Brain Injury
Pharmacy errors occur at multiple points in the dispensing process. Research from the National Center for Biotechnology Information identifies several high-risk error types that frequently result in neurological harm.
Wrong Medication Dispensed
The most dangerous pharmacy errors involve dispensing an entirely different drug than prescribed. This frequently occurs with look-alike, sound-alike (LASA) medications, which account for up to 25% of all medication errors. Examples include dispensing Glynase (diabetes medication) instead of Ritalin, or selecting the wrong drug from adjacent shelf locations.
Incorrect Dosage Strength
Dosing errors can be fatal, particularly when the wrong strength results in 10-fold overdoses. One New York case involved a pharmacy that mixed Total Parenteral Nutrition (TPN) with a dextrose concentration 10 times higher than prescribed, causing severe brain injury to a young boy. The case settled for $5.995 million.
Failure to Identify Contraindications
Pharmacists have a duty to exercise independent judgment and identify dangerous drug interactions or contraindications. According to research on physician and pharmacist liability, failure to catch excessive doses carries average payouts of $544,600, particularly involving opioids and cardiac medications.
Compounding and Preparation Errors
Medications requiring mixing or compounding present unique risks. Errors in calculating concentrations, mixing incompatible substances, or using contaminated equipment can result in metabolic catastrophes. TPN errors are particularly dangerous for vulnerable patients, including infants and those dependent on parenteral nutrition.
Real Pharmacy Error Brain Injury Cases and Settlements
Understanding actual case outcomes provides insight into the serious nature of pharmacy malpractice claims and the compensation available to victims.
| Case Type | Error | Injury | Settlement |
|---|---|---|---|
| TPN Dextrose Error (NY) | 10x concentration error | Brain injury in child | $5.995 million |
| Depakote Monitoring Failure | No liver function monitoring | Liver failure + brain damage | $8 million |
| Ritalin/Glynase Mix-up | Wrong medication dispensed | Seizure, permanent brain damage | $15 million total |
| Amiodarone Overdose | 1200mg TID vs 400mg prescribed | Stroke, death | $1 million |
| Methadone Dosing Error | Drug interaction not identified | Death | $1.9 million |
| Wrong Cardiac Drug | Nortriptyline dispensed in error | Heart + brain damage | $1.2 million |
These cases demonstrate that settlements for pharmacy error brain injuries typically range from $1 million to $15 million, depending on factors such as the victim’s age, the permanence and severity of brain damage, the degree of cognitive and physical impairment, the need for lifetime care and supervision, and lost earning capacity.
Time-Sensitive Legal Deadlines
New York law imposes strict deadlines for filing pharmacy malpractice claims. For private pharmacies and hospitals, you have 2 years and 6 months (30 months) from the date of the error. However, if the error occurred at a public or municipal hospital pharmacy, you must file a Notice of Claim within just 90 days. Missing these deadlines can permanently bar your right to compensation, regardless of how serious your injuries are.
New York Pharmacy Malpractice Legal Standards
To successfully pursue a pharmacy error brain injury claim in New York, you must understand the legal framework governing pharmacist liability and the standard of care.
The Pharmacist’s Duty of Care
New York law holds pharmacists to the highest degree of care in dispensing prescription drugs. As licensed healthcare professionals with doctoral degrees, pharmacists are held to a standard of care equal to the education and training of other members of their profession.
Pharmacists have specific duties that include accurately filling prescriptions with the correct medication, strength, and quantity, exercising independent judgment to identify excessive doses or dangerous interactions, informing patients of side effects and interactions upon request, and refusing to dispense contraindicated medications even when confirmed by the prescriber.
Importantly, according to legal precedent on pharmacist liability, pharmacists must exercise independent judgment regarding prescription safety. Courts have held that the duty to identify overdoses exists even when the pharmacist contacts the prescriber and the prescription is confirmed.
Proving Pharmacy Negligence
To establish a pharmacy malpractice claim in New York, you must prove four essential elements. First, you must demonstrate that the pharmacist owed you a duty of care, which is established when the pharmacy accepts and fills your prescription. Second, you must show a breach of the standard of care by proving the pharmacist failed to meet the standard expected of a competent pharmacist in the same situation, typically requiring expert testimony from another licensed pharmacist.
Third, causation must be established by demonstrating that the pharmacy error directly caused your brain injury. Medical expert testimony is usually required to establish this causal link. Finally, you must prove damages by documenting the actual harm suffered, including medical expenses, lost income, pain and suffering, and diminished quality of life.
Shared Liability: When Both Pharmacist and Physician Are Responsible
In many pharmacy error cases, both the prescribing physician and the dispensing pharmacist share liability. The physician may be liable for prescribing an inappropriate medication or dosage, failing to monitor for adverse effects, or not considering drug interactions. The pharmacist may be liable for failing to catch an obvious prescribing error, dispensing the wrong medication or strength, or not counseling the patient about risks.
For example, in the Lovecchio v Rosenthal case, a cardiologist prescribed amiodarone at 1200 mg three times daily instead of the standard 400 mg dose. The pharmacist failed to identify this excessive dosing. When the patient suffered a stroke and eventually died, the $1 million settlement was divided: $750,000 from the physician and $250,000 from the pharmacist.
Look-Alike, Sound-Alike Medications: A Hidden Danger
One of the most preventable yet persistent causes of pharmacy errors involves look-alike, sound-alike (LASA) medications. According to the World Health Organization, LASA medicines are a well-recognized cause of medication errors due to orthographic (look-alike) and phonetic (sound-alike) similarities.
Research indicates that LASA errors account for as much as 25% of all medication errors, with prevalence ranging from 0.00003% to 0.0022% of all prescriptions. While this may seem low, given the millions of prescriptions dispensed annually, these errors affect thousands of patients.
Common LASA Medication Pairs
Certain drug name combinations are particularly prone to confusion. High-risk pairs include medications with similar names like Celebrex and Celexa, Zantac and Zyrtec, and Adderall and Inderal. Sound-alike medications include those like metformin and metronidazole, or hydroxyzine and hydralazine.
Some LASA errors have resulted in serious consequences. The medical literature documents cases of intrathecal administration of digoxin (instead of the intended medication) associated with paraplegia and encephalopathy. The Ritalin/Glynase case mentioned earlier is another devastating example where a 7-year-old received a diabetes medication instead of ADHD medication, resulting in a seizure and permanent brain damage.
Prevention Strategies
Pharmacies can reduce LASA errors through several proven strategies, including tall man lettering where uppercase letters strategically differentiate similar names (e.g., hydrOXYzine vs hydrALAzine), barcode scanning systems that verify medications before dispensing, separate storage of commonly confused medications, computerized clinical decision support systems with real-time alerts, and mandatory pharmacist double-checks for high-risk medications.
The Role of Technology in Error Prevention
Computerized physician order entry (CPOE) systems reduce medication errors by approximately 50% according to research published by the National Center for Biotechnology Information. When combined with barcode patient identification and electronic health records with clinical decision support, these technologies create multiple safety checkpoints. However, technology is not foolproof, and pharmacists must still exercise professional judgment rather than relying solely on automated systems.
Damages Available in Pharmacy Error Brain Injury Claims
Victims of pharmacy-caused brain injury may be entitled to comprehensive compensation covering both economic and non-economic losses. Understanding the full scope of available damages is essential for pursuing fair compensation.
Economic Damages
Economic damages compensate for quantifiable financial losses. These include past and future medical expenses covering emergency treatment, hospitalization (which averages 20.1 days for patients with anoxic brain injury from medication-related causes), rehabilitation and therapy, ongoing medical care and monitoring, and assistive devices and home modifications.
Lost income and earning capacity represent another significant category, including wages lost during recovery, reduced earning capacity from cognitive impairment, lost career advancement opportunities, and the value of lost benefits and retirement contributions. Additionally, victims may recover costs for in-home care and assistance, vocational rehabilitation if return to work is possible, and transportation to medical appointments.
Non-Economic Damages
Non-economic damages compensate for intangible losses that profoundly impact quality of life. These include physical pain and suffering, emotional distress and mental anguish, loss of enjoyment of life and inability to participate in activities, cognitive impairment and loss of mental function, loss of companionship and consortium for spouses, and permanent disability and disfigurement.
In cases involving brain injury, non-economic damages often constitute the largest portion of settlements because neurological impairments fundamentally alter a person’s identity, capabilities, and relationships.
Punitive Damages
While less common, punitive damages may be available when a pharmacy’s conduct demonstrates gross negligence, reckless disregard for patient safety, or intentional misconduct. The Ritalin/Glynase case resulted in $5 million in compensatory damages plus $10 million in punitive damages, reflecting the jury’s determination that the pharmacy’s error was particularly egregious.
Punitive damages serve to punish wrongdoers and deter similar future conduct. They are most likely when pharmacies ignore obvious red flags, have patterns of repeated errors, fail to implement basic safety protocols, or falsify records to cover up mistakes.
The Claims Process for Pharmacy Error Brain Injury
Pursuing a pharmacy malpractice claim involves several critical steps. Understanding this process helps victims and families know what to expect.
Step 1: Immediate Medical Documentation
The first priority after discovering a pharmacy error is ensuring proper medical treatment and documentation. Seek immediate medical evaluation if you experience unexpected symptoms after taking a new medication. Keep all medication bottles, receipts, and pharmacy labels as evidence. Request copies of your complete medical records, including the original prescription, pharmacy dispensing records, and all treatment notes. Photograph the medication and prescription label.
Step 2: Preservation of Evidence
Critical evidence can disappear quickly, making prompt action essential. Do not discard the incorrectly dispensed medication, obtain the original prescription from your physician, request the pharmacy’s dispensing records before they can be altered, and gather contact information for any witnesses who were present when you picked up the medication or when symptoms began.
Step 3: Legal Consultation
Pharmacy error cases require specialized knowledge of both medical and pharmaceutical standards of care. An experienced medical malpractice attorney can review your pharmacy and medical records, consult with pharmacist and medical experts to evaluate the standard of care breach, calculate the full value of your damages, and determine all potentially liable parties (pharmacist, pharmacy, prescribing physician, hospital).
Most medical malpractice attorneys work on a contingency fee basis, meaning you pay no upfront costs and the attorney is paid a percentage of any settlement or verdict recovered.
Step 4: Expert Review and Certification
New York requires a certificate of merit in medical malpractice cases. Your attorney must obtain a statement from a qualified medical or pharmaceutical expert confirming that there is a reasonable basis to believe malpractice occurred. This expert will later provide testimony explaining how the pharmacy breached the standard of care and how that breach caused your brain injury.
Step 5: Filing the Lawsuit
If the pharmacy and its insurance company do not offer fair compensation during pre-litigation negotiations, your attorney will file a formal lawsuit. For public hospital pharmacies, remember that a Notice of Claim must be filed within 90 days. For private pharmacies, the lawsuit must be filed within 30 months of the error.
The complaint will identify all defendants (pharmacy, pharmacist, physician), detail the specific negligent acts, explain how the error caused brain injury, and demand compensation for all damages.
Step 6: Discovery and Investigation
During discovery, both sides exchange information and evidence. This includes written interrogatories requiring detailed answers under oath, requests for production of all relevant documents and records, depositions where parties and witnesses testify under oath, and expert witness reports detailing opinions on standard of care and causation.
Step 7: Settlement Negotiations or Trial
Most pharmacy error cases settle before trial, often during mediation sessions where a neutral third party facilitates negotiations. However, if settlement cannot be reached, the case proceeds to trial where a jury determines liability and damages. Given the sympathetic nature of brain injury cases and the clear preventability of many pharmacy errors, defendants often prefer to settle rather than risk a jury verdict.
Special Considerations for Vulnerable Populations
Certain patient populations face elevated risks from pharmacy errors and may have stronger claims due to the pharmacy’s heightened duty of care.
Pediatric Patients
Children are particularly vulnerable to pharmacy errors because medication dosing is typically calculated based on weight, requiring careful mathematical precision. Small calculation errors can result in dangerous overdoses. The developing brain is more susceptible to medication-induced injury, and children cannot always communicate adverse symptoms effectively.
The TPN case that settled for nearly $6 million involved a young boy, and the Ritalin/Glynase case resulting in $15 million involved a 7-year-old. Courts and juries recognize the particularly devastating impact of brain injury on a child’s development, education, and lifetime potential.
Elderly Patients
Research indicates that patients aged 75 and older experience 38% higher medication error rates than younger adults. Contributing factors include polypharmacy (taking multiple medications), age-related changes in drug metabolism, and cognitive impairments that make it harder to identify medication errors independently.
According to medication safety research, individuals on five or more medications have a 30% higher error rate, and elderly patients frequently fall into this category.
Patients Receiving Compounded Medications
Compounded medications, which must be specially mixed or prepared by the pharmacy, present unique risks. Errors in calculating concentrations, mixing incompatible substances, or contamination during preparation can have catastrophic consequences. The TPN error case is a prime example, where a compounding error in nutritional preparation caused severe brain injury.
Pharmacy Corporate Responsibility and Systemic Failures
While individual pharmacists may make errors, many pharmacy mistakes result from systemic failures by corporate pharmacy chains and hospital pharmacy departments. These systemic issues can support claims for institutional liability.
Understaffing and Excessive Workload
Research on medication dispensing errors identifies workload pressures and interruptions during preparation as major contributing factors. When pharmacies fail to maintain adequate staffing levels, pharmacists may be forced to fill prescriptions too quickly, skip important verification steps, and work without breaks during peak hours. Corporate policies prioritizing speed over safety create an environment where errors become inevitable.
Inadequate Training and Supervision
Pharmacies have a responsibility to ensure that all staff, including pharmacy technicians, receive proper training. Systemic failures include insufficient training on high-risk medications, lack of continuing education on new drugs and safety protocols, inadequate supervision of pharmacy technicians, and failure to implement double-check procedures for high-risk medications.
Deficient Safety Systems
Modern pharmacy practice should incorporate multiple safety checkpoints. According to the Institute for Safe Medication Practices (ISMP), pharmacies that fail to implement basic safety measures may be liable for resulting harm. Critical safety systems include computerized order entry with drug interaction alerts, barcode scanning for medication verification, separate storage areas for look-alike medications, adequate lighting and workspace design to prevent errors, and protocols requiring pharmacist verification before dispensing.
Reporting Pharmacy Errors
If you experience a pharmacy error, reporting it serves important purposes beyond your individual case. You can file a complaint with the New York State Board of Pharmacy, report the error to the Institute for Safe Medication Practices (ISMP) through their confidential reporting program, and notify the FDA through MedWatch if the error involves a dangerous drug interaction or labeling issue. These reports help identify patterns and prevent future errors affecting other patients.
Why Brain Injury Cases Require Specialized Legal Representation
Pharmacy error brain injury claims are among the most complex areas of medical malpractice law, requiring attorneys with specific expertise and resources.
Dual Expert Requirements
Unlike many malpractice cases requiring one type of expert, pharmacy brain injury claims typically need multiple specialists. You need a pharmacist expert to testify about the pharmacy standard of care and how it was breached, a neurologist or neurosurgeon to explain the brain injury mechanism and prognosis, a life care planner to calculate future medical needs and costs, and an economist to determine lost earning capacity and lifetime economic impact.
Pharmaceutical Knowledge
Your attorney must understand complex pharmaceutical concepts, including drug interactions and contraindications, pharmacokinetics (how drugs are absorbed, distributed, and eliminated), medication dosing calculations and compounding procedures, and pharmacy regulations and standard operating procedures.
Significant Resources Required
Brain injury cases can cost hundreds of thousands of dollars to litigate properly. Expert witness fees alone may exceed $50,000, and comprehensive life care plans can cost $20,000 or more. Medical record review and analysis, investigation costs, and trial preparation expenses add substantially to case costs. Large law firms with significant resources can advance these costs and wait for repayment until case resolution.
Questions to Ask Your Attorney
When selecting an attorney to handle your pharmacy error brain injury claim, asking the right questions helps ensure you choose qualified representation.
Experience Questions
- How many pharmacy error cases have you handled?
- What were the outcomes of those cases?
- Have you handled cases involving brain injury specifically?
- Do you have relationships with qualified pharmacist and neurologist experts?
Process Questions
- What is the timeline for my case?
- How will you investigate the pharmacy’s error?
- What evidence do we need to preserve?
- Will you handle the case personally or delegate to associates?
Financial Questions
- Do you work on contingency, and what is your fee percentage?
- Who pays for expert witnesses and case costs?
- What is the potential value range for my case?
- How long before we might see compensation?
Frequently Asked Questions
Common Questions About Pharmacy Error Brain Injury Claims
Can I sue a pharmacy for brain injury caused by the wrong medication?
Yes, you can sue a pharmacy if a dispensing error caused your brain injury. New York law holds pharmacists to the highest degree of care in filling prescriptions. If the pharmacy dispensed the wrong medication, incorrect dosage, or failed to identify dangerous contraindications, and this error directly caused your neurological injury, you have grounds for a malpractice claim. You must prove the pharmacy breached the standard of care and that this breach caused your brain damage, typically requiring expert testimony from a pharmacist and neurologist.
How long do I have to file a pharmacy error lawsuit in New York?
For private pharmacies and hospitals in New York, the statute of limitations is 2 years and 6 months (30 months) from the date of the pharmacy error. However, if the error occurred at a public or municipal hospital pharmacy, you must file a Notice of Claim within just 90 days of discovering the injury. This shorter deadline is strictly enforced, and missing it can permanently bar your claim regardless of how serious your injuries are. The continuous treatment rule may extend deadlines in some situations, so consult an attorney promptly.
What types of pharmacy errors most commonly cause brain injury?
The most dangerous pharmacy errors causing brain injury include dispensing the wrong medication entirely, particularly look-alike, sound-alike drugs that account for 25% of medication errors; ten-fold dosing errors where the wrong strength results in massive overdoses; compounding errors in prepared medications like Total Parenteral Nutrition; and failure to identify contraindications or dangerous drug interactions. Errors involving opioids, cardiac medications, diabetes drugs, and anticoagulants are particularly likely to cause neurological harm through mechanisms like oxygen deprivation, toxic effects, or metabolic catastrophes.
How much are pharmacy error brain injury settlements worth in New York?
Pharmacy error brain injury settlements in New York typically range from $1.2 million to $15 million based on documented cases. A TPN compounding error causing brain injury in a child settled for $5.995 million, while a case involving the wrong ADHD medication dispensed to a 7-year-old resulted in $15 million ($5 million compensatory plus $10 million punitive damages). Settlement value depends on the victim’s age and life expectancy, the permanence and severity of brain damage, the degree of cognitive and physical impairment, lost earning capacity, and the need for lifetime medical care and supervision.
What is the pharmacist’s duty of care in New York?
New York law holds pharmacists to the highest degree of care in dispensing prescription drugs. Pharmacists must accurately fill prescriptions with the correct medication, strength, and quantity; exercise independent judgment to identify excessive doses or dangerous interactions even when the prescriber confirms the prescription; inform patients of side effects and drug interactions upon request or when the pharmacist has actual knowledge of a potentially dangerous condition; and refuse to dispense contraindicated medications. Courts have held that pharmacists cannot simply defer to physician judgment when obvious errors or safety concerns exist.
Can both the pharmacist and doctor be held liable for medication errors?
Yes, both the prescribing physician and the dispensing pharmacist can share liability for medication errors causing brain injury. The physician may be liable for prescribing inappropriate medications or dosages, failing to monitor for adverse effects, or not considering contraindications. The pharmacist may be liable for failing to catch obvious prescribing errors or dispensing the wrong medication or strength. In the Lovecchio v Rosenthal case involving an amiodarone overdose, the $1 million settlement was divided with $750,000 from the physician and $250,000 from the pharmacist who failed to identify the excessive dose.
What should I do immediately after discovering a pharmacy error?
If you suspect a pharmacy error, seek immediate medical evaluation if experiencing any unexpected symptoms after taking a new medication. Preserve all evidence by keeping the medication bottle with the pharmacy label, prescription paperwork, and receipts. Do not throw away the pills even if you stop taking them. Request copies of the original prescription from your doctor and dispensing records from the pharmacy. Photograph the medication and label. Document your symptoms and when they began. Contact an experienced medical malpractice attorney as soon as possible, especially if the error occurred at a public hospital where you have only 90 days to file a Notice of Claim.
Protect Your Rights After a Pharmacy Error
Pharmacy errors causing brain injury represent a particularly tragic form of medical malpractice because they are almost always preventable. Whether the error involved dispensing the wrong medication, a dangerous dosing miscalculation, or failure to identify contraindications, victims deserve full compensation for the devastating consequences.
New York law recognizes that pharmacists hold positions of trust and must exercise the highest degree of care when dispensing medications. When that duty is breached and brain injury results, the pharmacy and responsible individuals must be held accountable.
If you or a loved one suffered neurological harm due to a pharmacy error, time is critical. Evidence can disappear, memories fade, and legal deadlines approach. The 90-day Notice of Claim requirement for public hospital pharmacies is particularly unforgiving, and even the 30-month deadline for private pharmacies arrives more quickly than most people realize.
Our brain injury attorneys understand the devastating impact these preventable errors have on victims and families. We have successfully represented clients in complex medication error cases, holding negligent pharmacies and healthcare providers accountable.
Schedule Your Free Consultation
Our medical malpractice team has extensive experience handling complex pharmacy error cases involving brain injury. We work with leading pharmacist and neurologist experts to build compelling cases, and we advance all costs so you pay nothing unless we recover compensation for you.
