In Clay, many diagnostic problems don’t come from one dramatic mistake. They show up as a pattern:
- A first visit happens, symptoms are noted, and testing is ordered—but follow-up instructions are unclear.
- Imaging or lab results are completed, yet the next step depends on who contacts the patient and when.
- A referral is recommended, but your care stalls while you wait on scheduling, paperwork, or records transfer.
- Symptoms evolve during the delay, and later providers have to piece together what was missed.
Your case may involve urgent care, primary care, hospital care, and specialist input at different times. A lawyer can help you map how information moved (or didn’t move)—because delayed diagnosis claims often hinge on decision points, not just bad outcomes.


