In Casselberry, many people first seek care when symptoms start during a busy stretch—before work, after school, or while trying to avoid taking more time off. They may receive initial impressions, basic testing, or discharge instructions with follow-up recommendations. The problem is that diagnostic delay cases often depend on what was known at the time and whether clinicians responded appropriately to red flags.
Diagnostic delay may look like:
- Abnormal imaging or lab results that weren’t acted on promptly
- A symptom pattern that was treated as routine when it required escalation
- Missed follow-up after referrals or pending test outcomes
- Incomplete workups when a more thorough evaluation was reasonable
If you’ve been replaying dates and appointments in your head, that’s normal. The next step is turning that uncertainty into an evidence-based chronology your attorney can review.


