In and around Severance, diagnostic delay often shows up in ways that don’t feel dramatic at first—until months later.
Common scenarios include:
- Follow-up breakdowns after abnormal labs or imaging: A primary care visit may generate urgent findings, but the next step (contact, referral, repeat testing, or action on “abnormal” results) takes too long.
- Referral lag: You’re told to see a specialist, but scheduling delays—combined with unclear instructions—mean the next evaluation doesn’t occur quickly enough.
- “Fix the symptom” visits: Visits for recurring pain, fatigue, or other complaints may lead to incomplete workups, while a more serious underlying condition remains unaddressed.
- Multiple handoffs across facilities: Records from urgent care, imaging centers, hospitals, and specialists don’t always align. If key findings aren’t clearly communicated or documented, the timeline can become disputed.
Because these patterns are tied to how care is actually delivered locally (and how quickly you can be seen), the details matter: dates, documentation, and what each provider knew at the time.


