Oro Valley’s mix of suburban life and frequent travel for specialty care can create real-world gaps in coordination. It’s common for patients to:
- Start with primary care, then shift to urgent care for escalating symptoms.
- Complete imaging or lab work at one location and receive results weeks later or through a different channel.
- Get referred to specialists who may have longer scheduling windows.
- Have records fragmented across facilities, portal messages, and phone follow-ups.
When any of those handoffs go wrong—missed abnormal results, unclear follow-up instructions, or inadequate reassessment as symptoms persisted—the delay can become legally relevant.


