In and around San Gabriel, it’s common for medical care to be fragmented—urgent care one day, imaging at a separate facility, then results reviewed by a specialist later. Add commuting delays and scheduling gaps, and it’s easy for abnormal findings to “fall through the cracks,” even when patients do their best to comply.
Diagnostic delay problems often show up as:
- Unacted-on abnormal results (labs/imaging not reviewed promptly or not communicated clearly)
- Referral follow-through failures (recommendations given but not acted on in time)
- Reassessment gaps (symptoms persist or worsen, but the workup doesn’t escalate)
- Documentation disconnects between facilities (missing reports, unclear instructions, incomplete handoffs)
When your care spans multiple providers or locations, the legal work becomes timeline-focused: who had what information, when they had it, and what a reasonable clinician would have done next.


