In suburban communities like Lone Tree, it’s common for care to be fragmented:
- A visit begins in a primary care office, then imaging is ordered later
- Lab results arrive electronically, but follow-up depends on scheduling
- Referrals to specialists take time—sometimes longer than patients expect
When you’re commuting and coordinating appointments, it’s easy to miss a phone call, overlook a portal message, or assume someone else will contact you about abnormal findings. From a legal perspective, diagnostic delay cases often turn on whether the provider had a clear responsibility to communicate, act, or re-check.
If your records show abnormal results with delayed action—or a recommendation that wasn’t followed—your lawyer can evaluate whether that gap may reflect a deviation from the expected standard of care.


