Graciela McCallum lived a full life before she suffered a paralyzing stroke. At 73, she had a fiance, traveled often and was living her dream of running a small florist boutique and interior design shop. But a medical emergency in 2013 derailed the active lifestyle that had been a source of pride and left her requiring 24-hour care.

Her lawyers claimed doctors practicing “assembly line medicine” had taken McCallum off a preventative drug, triggering a debilitating injury five months later. They claimed the error was avoidable, especially since McCallum was under the care of not one, but two, cardiologists.

“She was rocking along pretty well,” said her attorney, Gary D. Fox, partner at personal injury law firm Stewart Tilghman Fox Bianchi & Cain. “The shame of this case is she's damaged, not through anything other than medical stupidity and carelessness.”