In our region, it’s common for patients to receive care across multiple settings—urgent care visits, follow-ups with primary care, referrals to specialists, and imaging/lab results processed behind the scenes. That handoff chain matters. When results aren’t communicated clearly, follow-up is delayed, or symptoms are treated as “temporary” despite red flags, the gap between “what was known” and “what was done” can widen.
Delays can also be harder to spot when you’re traveling for appointments or working around limited availability. By the time a condition is finally diagnosed, the medical record may reflect a more advanced stage than what you experienced earlier. That’s exactly why documentation and chronology matter so much.


