In Coral Gables, people routinely move between urgent care, specialists, and hospital systems—often with limited time to advocate for themselves during commuting and work hours. That can create gaps, especially when:
- A provider documents abnormal labs or imaging but follow-up is delayed.
- A patient is told to monitor symptoms, yet no clear escalation plan is provided.
- Referrals depend on scheduling availability, and the system doesn’t verify receipt or urgency.
- Records transfer between facilities, but critical details (or dates) don’t make it into the next chart.
These issues aren’t “just paperwork.” In delayed diagnosis cases, timing and communication matter because diagnosis often hinges on whether key information was acted on when it was available.


