In a place like Solana Beach, care often involves multiple handoffs: a primary care clinician, urgent care, ER visits around weekends or sudden symptoms, and imaging or lab work ordered through one system and interpreted through another. That fragmentation can create gaps—sometimes as simple as a result not being communicated quickly, and sometimes as serious as a failure to act on abnormal findings.
Common local patterns we see include:
- Weekend/after-hours care where follow-up is delayed or recommendations are not tracked.
- Referrals that stall while patients are waiting for appointments up and down the coast.
- Imaging and lab results that enter a chart but don’t trigger timely reassessment.
- Interruption in continuity when people switch providers or facilities due to insurance, scheduling, or travel.
When you’re trying to remember dates and symptoms while also dealing with recovery, the timeline can blur. A lawyer’s job is to rebuild it from records—pinpointing when a reasonable clinician should have escalated care.


