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Wrong Dose Pharmacy Error Lawsuit

While prescription medications can save many lives, the wrong dosage that may be too high or too low can result in critical injuries or fatalities.

Dosage that is wrong can happen under certain circumstances which may include the following: your physician made a prescription of the right medication at the wrong dosage; nurses, pharmacists, or healthcare staff offered you the incorrect medication; though the dosage was correct, the duration of time to take the medication was too short or too long; the medication is acting negatively with other medicines taken; and the medication received is harmful, defective, or bad.

Through a wrong dose pharmacy error lawsuit, unfortunately, pharmacies and medical facilities can be held liable legally for medication errors.

Virtually any prescription error or pharmaceutical error can result in catastrophic consequences including overdosing, toxic reaction, poisoning, or fatality.

Dispensing the Wrong Dosage

Medication prescriptions are manufactured following stringent controls, regulations and protocols to make certain of the safety of every individual who uses the medication. If administered improperly at any duration of delivery, this can result in critical injury.

Due to that, the physician, nurse, pharmacist, or other healthcare provider should have no room for errors. Even the simplest of mistakes can be a result of calamity, and place the well-being and health of that individual in severe jeopardy.


Healthcare professionals, pharmaceutical manufacturers, and pharmacies are responsible to prescribe accurately, and dispense medications, as gatekeepers between medications and patients.

In a number of situations, an error in dosage is the result of a prescription error, when the pharmacist cannot read the illegible handwriting of a physician.

This can result in a wrong dose pharmacy error lawsuit. A numerical mistake or clerical error, other times, can result in severe problems for the patient, namely if the drug is provided in hazardous quantities, with inaccurate instructions, or at a strength that is too high.

The pharmacist creates an error in measurement, in a number of situations, by using calibrated scales that are inaccurate, or combining the wrong dosage for a compound drug.

Young children can be provided the wrong dosage in a healthcare environment, which produces major negative results.

This can include the following: giving a young child dosage intended for an adult; misdiagnosis of a critical condition; neglect to account for the size or age of a young patient; neglect to monitor properly the health of the child; mistake of anesthesia; laboratory error; mistake in the hospital pharmacy; on the prescription, illegible handwriting; automated dispensing equipment for medicine malfunction; and neglect to consider the previous drug adverse reactions of a young patient, and healthcare history.

Medication mistakes can be preventable if the healthcare team, facility, or pharmacist follows precise protocols to make certain that a child receives the suitable medication at the proper dosage; when an individual is offered the wrong dosage of a prescription medicine, he or she becomes likely to suffer critical adverse effects that could be extensive or fatal.

It is crucial to take legal action immediately against the physician, nurse, pharmacist, or other medical professional at-fault when filing a wrong dose pharmacy error lawsuit.

Contact us for a free consultation or call Anzalone Law Firm PLLC, at: 603.548.3797.

Client Reviews
★★★★★
Great lawyer...Professional, organized, caring and effective. Michael is very informative and was always willing to explain the reasons behind what was being done. Can't say enough about how helpful he was every step of the way. It was really nice to feel like I actually understood what was going on with my case. Catherine Veilleux